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A REAL AND INTENSELY INTERESTING 



CONTAINING AN AUTHENTIC ACCOUNT OF THE WONDERFUL ESCAPE OP 

THE BEAUTIFUL KATE WATSON, 

FROM A FLAMING BUILDING IN THE CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, 



GEORGE LIPPARD 


7 


AUTHOR OF “ WASHINGTON AND HIS GENERALS,” “BLANCHE OF BRANDT 

WINE,” “THE QUAKER CITY,” LADYE ANNABEL,” “LEGENDS 


OF MEXICO, 


»• «( 


NAZARENE, 


THE MAN WITH THE MASK, 

JESUS AND THE POOR, 


•’ << 


THE 


” (i 


he., he., &c., he 








PUBLISHED BY E. E. 


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BARCLAY AND A. R. ORTON. 


1852. 















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in the City to-night, and men have been shot, who are worth your weight in gold,” — thus spake Cromwell* 

“One man wouldn’t be missed much, particularly a man like you.” 


























# 










CONTAINING AN AUTHENTIC ACCOUNT OF THE 






I 




UT 



* 



FROM A FLAMING BUILDING IN THE CITY OF PHILADELPHIA, 




GEORGE LIPPARD, 

AUTHOR OF “WASHINGTON AND HIS GENERALS,” “ BLANCHE OF BRANDY' 

WINE,” “THE QUAKER CITY,” LADYE ANNABEL,” “LEGENDS 
OF MEXICO,” “THE MAN WITH THE MASK,” “THE 

NAZARENE,” “JESUS AND THE POOR,’ 

&C.. &C., &C., &C 





PUBLISHED BY E. E. BARCLAY AND A. R. ORTON. 

1851 . 
















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Prostrate on his face, the blood from the wound trickling over the boards of the floor, and over him triumphant and chuckling 

stood the Iscgio, “ Bulqine, ’ the knife which he shook dripping its red drops upon his black and brawny arm. 







• PART I # 

THE STUDENTS. 

On a warm summer night, in the year 1846, 
two students of Yale College, were sitting 

alone, in their room, in the Hotel, well 

known to the people of the fair City of Elms. 
One of these young men was the son of a 
Philadelphia Merchant; the other was the son 
of a native of Cuba, who for political offences 
had been exiled from the “Gem of the Gulf.” 
Seated near a table, copiously overspread with 
the tokens of student-life, in all its phases — 
pipes, cigars, bottles, g asses, Greek Gram- 
mars and Latin Lexicons — these young men 
were discussing their llavannahs of the latest 
and best brand, as they engaged in earnest 
conversation. 

4* 9 t r | 9 •* t # m 

Cromwell Ilicks, the son of the Philadel- 
phia merchant, was a youth of some nineteen 
years, rather tall, with blue eyes, fair com- 
plexion and a prominent chin adorned by a 
precocious beard. Dressed in a flashy wrap- 
per, which thrown back, displayed a white 
vest and blue cravat, Cromwell rested his 
feet upon the table, in a manner that gave his 
comrade every opportunity to examine the 
plaid of his pantaloons and the patent leather 
of his gaiters. 

The young Cuban was a man of different 
make: Slim, elegantly formed, his eyes, beard 
and complexion dark, he rested his elbows 
upon the table and leaning his cheeks upon his 
hands, looked steadily into the face of Crom- 
well from the opposite side of the table, at the 
same time passing the smoke of his cigar 
through his nostrils with all the gusto ol a 
confirmed snooker Don Jorge Marin was 
two years older than his companion ; and 


| altogether of a more nervous and excitable 
temperament. 

The conversation of the young men will 

d close a portion of the incidents which o oen 
our narrative. 

| “ Expelled !” said Cromwell with an em- 

phatic puff. 

“Expelled!” echoed Don Jorge, in very 

' 1 : 5 1 i E 1 - 1 1 h , and with a column of s moke 
issuing from each nostril. 

“ And after I have only been six months at 
College!” said Cromwell, helping himself to 
a glass of brandy, 

have been here a little longer — a year,” 
responded Don Jorge, lighting a fresh cigar. 

“ Just look at our affairs ! In a lark — a quiet 

genteel sort of lark— we attempted to abduct 

the daughter of one of the Professors — after 

which, with an old cannon, we took a shy at 

one of the college buildings. We merely 

wished to have a little fun with the girl and 

blow die college building into its original ee- 

ment. And for this we have been expelled 

Really George, my boy, the world is getting 
illiberal, 

“ What shall we do ?” responded Jorge or 
George as you may choose to spell it — “I 
can’t move until 1 get a etter from my father 
who is now at Saratoga, You know he was 
exiled from Cuba when I was but a child, and 
since then we have subsisted upon the wreck 
i his fortune, wiiich he managed to bring 
with hira to this country. Funds are rather 
low with him just now, and besides that he is 
always engaged upon some attempt or other to 
free our native Island from the Spaniard. Be- 
sides he’s rather indignant about some of my 
capers in New York last winter — ” * 



Pon Jorge was interrupted by his compan- 
ion • — 

tt I too am waiting (or a letter from my 
father. He’s an elderly gentleman, round in 
face and white in cravat — devoted to stocks — 
and with a kind of Quaker kink to the collar 
of his coat. Fond of good living — some- 
times liberal — and sometimes stingy a*s Astor. 
Mother, however, is my friend at court — some 
fifteen years younger than father, she always 
manages to bring the old man to terms. It 
was through her that I escaped the counting- 
room, and came to College. Zounds! 1 wish 
the letter would come.” 


| “ A little more brandy Patrick, and by the 

bye, I came in late, and had no chance to see 
j whether iere was any letters for me at the 
Bar, Do you know of any V 9 
, “Letthers? Be jabers ye’ll excuse me for 
saying the same but the Landlord was growl- 
hi’ about your bill — a matther of three months 
unpaid — and the washerwoman was in the 
l hall, all the night long, awaitin’ yez and swa- 
in’ like blazes about the number of dozens that 
he’s done for yez. And the tailor — fax if I 
was yez Misther Hicks I’d pay the divils and 

lave this afore they would say Jack Robin- 
son ” - 


Young Hicks rose, and going to the win- 
dow looked out upon the night. It was hot, 

damp and “drizzly.” A misty cloud over- 
spread the City of Elms, and the prospect was 

a 

cheerless as the young man’s fortunes. While 
the young American, hands in his pockets, 
was engaged in a sort oi vacant survey of the 
state of the weather, the young Cuban drew a 
letter from his pocket, postmarked “Saratoga,” 
and signed “ Antonio Marin.” While he pe- 
rused the letter a singular smile gleamed over 
his dark features, and his eyes shone with a 
sudden and peculiar light. 

“I have heard from my father,” he mut- 
tered, and replaced the letter in his vest 

“ Suppose the answer of your father is un- 
favorable, what will you do, Crom?” asked 
Don Jorge, as his comrade again approached 
the light — “Get a clerkship in Pearl street, 

or take daguerreotypes?” 

The expression of his mus ached lip did 
not altogether please Cromwell. I Ie consigned 
the clerkship and the daguerreotype to a per- 
sonage not to be mentioned, and rounding of 
the sentence with an oath continued — 

“The old man dare not send an unfavorable 
letter. Mother won’t let him.” 

Dropping into the chair, he took a fresh 
cigar, and in a moment was lost in a cloud. 

“ I wonder if all the servants have gone to 
bed ? I should like to have some more 
brandy,” exclaimed Don Jorge pulling the bell 
rope. In a moment — it did not seem longer 
— a servant appeared — and rubbing his 

sleepy eyelids, asked in good Hibernian 

“What ’ud yez plase to have Misther 

Hicks !” 



Patrick was the confidential servant of Mr. 
Cromwell Hicks — familiar with his vices and 
his money — hence his familiarity. On the 

a 

present occasion however his jocular remarks 
uttered in the richest Hibernian, were received 
by his master with a gloomy scowl. 

“ Get some brandy Pat, and let the landlord, 

washerwoman and tailor go to the— 

There were no letters left for me ?” 

A look of intelligence passed between the 
servant and Don Jorge. Patrick advanced to 
the light, searching in his pockets with a sort 
of half confused and half repentant air — . 

“ Letthers ! Och the blazes ! Have I lost 
it?” 

|h 

“ Lost it ?” 

“ Jist five minutes ago, there was a rino- a t 

J“5 ** * 

the door, and one of the ould boys wid a 
white towel about his neck — one of the chaps 
from the college I mane — hands me a leuher 
for you. Fax I’d not forgot it. Here’s the 
crathur ” 

from well seized the letter, “ From the old 
man!” he muttered and broke the seal. As 
he read. 1 on Jorge watched him with a steady 
gaze. The countenance of young Hicks grad- 
ually darkened ; his lip trembled, and at length 
flinging the letter across the table, he asked 
his companion to read it. Jorge seized the 
letter, and hastily gathered its contents ; 



Sib: 

Your education, supposed to have been com- 
menced at the counting room, but in reality begun at 
race course, the bar room and the brothel, has I 
perceive found its appropriate termination in your re- 
cent exploits at college. ^ ou can now appty what you 
have learned, in your intercourse with the world. You 
will need all your knowledge, for as regards money, 
you need expect none from me. I have paid for your 




7 


vices long enough and am determined o be disgraced 
by you no longer. " .-o . : 

• Yours, <fec. 

Jacob D. Z. Hicks. 

P. S. This time the persuasions of your mother are 
fruitless. I have made up my mind. 

When Jorge had finished the perusal o this 
fatherly epistle, he drew from his vest pocket 
the letter postmarked “Saratoga’ ’ and flung it 
across the table. 

“ Read it Crom. 1 received it this evening 
but was afraid to show it, until I learned your 
fate,” 

Cromwell cast his eye over the letter. It 
was brief and delightfully concise. 

Don Jorge : 

Degenerate son of an illustrious line, I 
have disowned you. I will pay none of your bills. 
You have nothing to expect from me. My parting ad- 
vice is, that you lay aside the name which you have 
disgraced, and let me never hear from you again. 

Adieu 

Antonio Marin. 

Patrick who had observed the faces o the 
young gentlemen, with one eye closed, now 
broke the silence by the exclamation — — 

“ It strikes me that there’s a pair o yez in 
the same box, be jabers !” 

This lively remark was answered by Crom- 
well with a sign and a word. He flung his 
book at the servant’s head, adding significantly 
as he pointed to the door — “brandy!” 

Patrick gone, the two young gentlemen took 
council together. Their condition was indeed 
desperate. Young, vigorous and with tolera- 
ble talents, they were ashamed to work, and 
had no disposition to earn its wages by one 
effort of honest toil. Educated in the bar-room, 
the gambling hell and the brothel, they now 
saw the world before them, and had the oppor- 
tunity of testing its qualities, without a dollar 
in their pockets. , I 

“Bad!” said Jorge, stroking his black mus- 
tache. , r i 

“ Not a dollar !” responded Cromwell, and 

§ 

laid his head upon his hands. Patrick returned 
with the brandy and a bundle of cigars ; a ter , 
tie had gone the young gentlemen took a glass 
of the former, and a couple of the latter, and set 
them down to contemplate their ruined fortunes. 

For a long time they drank and smoked in si- 
lence. 

I have it,” cried J orge, striking the table | 


with his clenched hand. “ You must go to Phi- 
ladelphia — I to Saratoga. Each of us must 
have a talk with his father. In three days 
we’ll meet in New York, at Lovejoy’s Hotel, 
opposite the Park, and compare at once our 
finances and our prospects. Will you give me 
your hand on it V 9 

Cromwell opened his blue eyes, — “ Why I 
have not a dollar to pay my passage from here 
to Philadelphia. I’m dead broke !” 

Jorge displayed a twenty dollar bill — “I 
borrowed it from Patrick this afternoon. I’ll 
halve it with you.” 

“ But how can we leave the hotel without 
paying our bills ?” 

M Walk away,” responded Jorge. — “Walk 
away at dead of night, Crom., and let the land- 
lord wait until we are in funds.” 

“But suppose I come back to New York 
without a cent of money? Suppose the old 
man comes the granite — what then? Fathers 
have done such things ?” 

O 

II is eyes fiery with brandy, he awaited the 
answer of his comrade in evident hesitation. 
Don Jorge bent over the table, his dark features 
glowing with excitement, 

“There is an island in the gulf — ” he said ; 
“ an Eden of a place, with many a snug cove 
to shelter a craft which has not been properly 
cleared at the Custom House. You take? An 
Island which has free air, tropical fruits and 
dowers, aye and a grand old cove, just deep 
enough and wide enough, to shelter a band of 
brave fellows, who after the perils of the sea, 
may choose to solace their solitude with good 
wine and beautiful Creoles. Are you dull of 
comprehension, or sha 1 ' I sing it for you?” 

The excitement which animated his face 
seemed gradually to communicate itself to the 
fair complexioned visage of his friend. 

“ An island in the gulf? Bah ! You aint 
romancing ? H ow shall we get there ?” 

“ Four days rom this a vessel leaves New 
York city for Turk’s Island. H er papers are 
made out — her crew picked — her owners 
only wait my answer.” 

“ Your answer ?” 

“ Yes, my answer . Aware that I am by 
birth a Cuban, they seem to think that I can . 
manage the affairs of the craft with the skill 
of a born sailor. I have been at sea, you 
know ? These owners only wait for the cap- 



6 


tain and first mate of the “ Sarah Jane.” I 
have some knowledge of the sea ; you have a 
steady eye, and firm nerves. I will be cap- 
tain — you will be first mate — ” 

The proposition seemed to the half-drunken 
Philadelphian like the fancy of a dream. 

“ Pshaw 1 You aint in earnest ? The days 
of Piracy are past and gone. As for Pirates, 
they only exist in Melo-dramas — particularly 
at the Chatham Street Theatre. Come, Geor- 
gy, my boy, none of your gammon — ” 

iracy! I said nothing of Piracy,’’ qui- 
etly interposed the Cuban, knocking the ashes 
from his cigar — “Just hand me the bottle, and 
I’ll be more explicit,” 

i ie botile was handed, glasses filled, and in 
a low voice Don Jorge began to develope his 
ideas. The countenance of Cromwell began 

! brighten with something more than drunken 
excitement. 

“ No ! no ! By Heaven, I’ll have nothing 

lo with it,” he cried, his not unhandsome 
face stamped with horror. 

“ But the one trip will set us up for life,” 
persuasively suggested Don Jorge, 

“ I won’t, I swear I won’t !” fairly shrieked 
Cromwell — “Sooner will 1 go to Philadel- 
phia and go into tire Counting house as an er- 
rand boy. Come — George — this is a joke 
of yours — aint it now ?” 

The sombre visage of the Cuban fairly glis- 
tened with scorn. His lip curled under its 
dark mustache as he replied — 

“ It you had the heart or pluck of a man, 
you’d soon see what kind of a joke it is. I'm 
ashamed o you, Mr. Hicks.” 

These words excited all that was irritable in 
the heart of the young Philadelphian. Starting 
from his chair, he in incoherent words demand- 
ed an explanation from Don Jorge, and flung 
back the charge of cowardice into his teeth. 
The Cuban also rose, his countenance display- 
ing more resolution than anger. 

“It wili do us no good to fight. Meet me 
three days tram this, at Lovejoy’s in New York, 
and if you don’t conclude to accept my propo- 
sition, then I will fig] it you. There’s my hand . 

on it.” , 

Young Hicks could not refuse the pro fered 

hand. 

In a few moments, the young gentlemen left 


the room and the hotel, without one word of 

farewell to the landlord. 

% 

Scarce had they gone, when Patrick entered 
their room, and surveying their trunks which 
locked and corded stood near the windows, he 
soliloquized: “ Sure that Don Jorge is a broth 
of a boy ! To go and pay the hotel bill and 
then purtend to stale off like a thafe o’ th’ world! 
An’ it’s my private opinion that lie’s got young 
Misther Hicks in tow, for some devl’ment or 
’tother. Then he pays well, and it’s a good 
five dollar bill this?” drawing a bill from his 
pocket — “ The blackguards I Div’l a drop in 
the bottle 1” 

While Patrick concludes his soliloquy, 

and our two young gentlemen are pushing their 
way through the dark streets of New Haven, 
we will briefly inform the reader of one or two 
facts, which have an important bearing upon 
the course of this narrative. 

Don Jorge had involved Crom. Hicks in the 
“scrape” which produced their expulsion. 
Don Jorge had written under an assumed name 
a full account of the affair to the father of his 
comrade. Don Jorge had himself written the 
letter, signed with the name of his own father, 
and contrived that it should be forwarded to 
him from Saratoga. 

From this it will appear that Don Jorge had 
rather a deep interest in the affairs of Mr. 
Cromwell Hicks, son of Jacob D. Z. Hicks, 
Esq. 

The nature of this interest will appear in 
the course of our narrative. 

PART II. >r , 

MR. CROMWELL HICKS AND THE “OLD MAN.” 

Two days after the scene recorded in part 
I. late in the afternoon, Mr. Cromwell Hicks 
ascended the marble steps of his father’s man- 
sion in Walnut street. Dressed in a light blue 
frock, buff vest and plaid pants, Cromwell was 
covered with the dust of the cars ; and his 
whole appearance betrayed the tokens of anxi- 
ety and fatigue. His heart fluttering under his 

buff vest, he pulled the bell. It was answered 

by a strange servant, who answered his i„- 
quiry in Tegard to his father, with the informa- 
tion that Mr, Hicks and family had left .four 
days previous for Jape May. 

This was an unexpected blow. Surveying 



9 


first the vacant face of the servant, and then 
casting a glance at his dusty attire, Cromwell 
for a few moments was in doubt as to his fu- 
ture course. It was a broiling day ; the streets 
were almost deserted ; to his eye the town 
looked black and gloomy as in mid-winter. 
He was without a dollar in the world, having 

spent the last cent in defraying his passage 
from New York. 

“Will you leave your name, sir?” asked 
the servant. 

“Never mind,” exclaimed Cromwell, “Til 
stop at the counting house and leave my mes- 
sage with Mr. Grimly.” 

The “counting house” was an old brick 
building, which stood in an alley near Ohes- 
nut and Front, amid warehouses of more mod- 
ern construction, beside which it looked like 
an old fashioned “ man of business,” dressed 
in Quaker garb, compared with the high collared 
and dapper built men of business of the pres- 
ent day. It was antiquity itself. Its bricks 
were faded, its windows small and dark, its 
cellars deep and cavernous : it was in fact one 
of the old houses belonging to old firms, which 
do more business in one day, with all their 
cobwebs and dust, than your modern house 
does in a year. To this aged edifice, deter- 
mined to try his powers of persuasion upon 
Mr. Grimly, his father’s head clerk, Cromwell 
bent his steps. 

He entered the counting room. It was hid- 

o 

den away at the farther end of a large gloomy 
place, and was fenced olF from bales of goods, 
and hogsheads of cogniae, by a dingy railing of 
unpainted pine. 

“ Where is Mr. Grim y ?” asked young 
Hicks, of the negro porter, who was the only 
person visible. 

“list gone out,” answered the porter, who 
did not recognize his employer’s son ; “ back 
d’rectly.” 

J 

“I’ll wait for him,” was the answer, and 
Cromwell sauntered into the counting room, 

which was furnished with an old chair, a laro-e 

1 b 

desk and a range of shelves filled with ledgers. 
It was a gloomy place, with a solitary window 
looking out upon a gloomier yard. An opened 
letter, spread upon the desk, attracted the eye 
of the hopeful youth. It was from Cape May, 
bore the signature of his father, was addressed 


I to Mr. Grimly ius head clerk, and contained 
this brief injunction: 

u Grimly — I send you a check for ? 5,000. Cash it, 
and meet that note of Tompkins & Co.— to-morrow — 
you understand V 9 

“ Where the deuce is the check ?” solilo- 
quised Cromwell, and forthwith began to look 
for it, but in vain. While thus engaged, his 
ear was attracted by the sound of a footstep. 
Looking through the railing, he beheld a short, 
little man, with a round face and a hooked 
nose, approaching at a brisk pace. As he saw 
him, his fertile brain hit upon a p lan of opera- 
tion. 

. If l Grim y, my good fellow,” he said, as the 
head clerk opened the door of the counting 
room, “ I’ve been looking for you all over 
town. Quick! — At Walnut street wharf! — 
There’s no time to be lost !” 

lie spoke these incoherent words with every 
manifestation of alarm and terror. As much 
surprised at the sudden appearance of the vaga- 
bond son in the counting room, as at his hur- 
ried words, the head clerk was for a few mo- 
ments at a loss for words. 

“ You here — umph ! Thought you was at 
College — eh !” exclaimed Grimly as soon as 
he found his tongue — “Walnut street wharf? 
What do vou mean?” 

“ Mr. Grimly,” responded the young man 
slowly and with deliberation, “ I mean that in 
returning from Cape May father has been 
stricken with an apoplectic fit. He’s on board 
the boat. Mother sent me up here, to tell you 

to come down without delay. Quick! No 
time’s to be lost.” 

Grimly seemed thunderstricken. He placed 

his finger on the tip o! his nose, muttering — 

“ Old Hicks struck with apoplexy — bad ! bad ! 

Here’s this check to be cashed, and that note 

of Tompkins & Co. to be met. What snail I 
do—” 

“I’ll tell you, Grimly. Give me the check 
— Til get it cashed and then go and take up 
the note, while you hurry down to the wharf.” 

He said this in quite a confidential manner, 
laying his hand on Grimly’s arm and looking 
very affectionately into his face. 

in answer to this, Mr. Grimly closed one 
eye — arranged his white cravat — and seemed 
buried in thought, while promwell stood wait- 
ing with evident impatience for his answer. 



10 


% 


“ You’ ve been to Cape May — have you ?” | 

he said, regarding Cromwell with one eye 
closed, 

“ You know I haven’t. I have just got on 
from New York, and met one of father’s ser- 
vants as I was coming off the boat. He told 
me the old gentleman had been taken with ap- 
oplexy on the way up. I went into the cabin 
of the Cape May boat which had just come to, 
and saw lather there. Mother gave me the 
message which I have just delivered. Indeed, 
Mr. Grimly you’d better hurry — ” 

u Then you had better take this check,” 
said Grimly extending his hand, “ Get it 
cashed and take up that note. It is now half 

past two, it must be done without delay,” 

• ' 

His eyes glistening Cromwell reached forth j 
his hand o grasp the check, when Mr. Grimly 
drew hack his hand, quietly observing at the 
same time “I think Cromwell you had better 
ask your father. G ere he is. Rather singu- 
lar that he’s so soon recovered from his fit of 
apoplexy ?” 

Scarcely had the words passed his lips, 
when at his shoulder appeared the portly 
figure of the father, Mr. Jacob D. Z. Hicks, a 
gentleman of some fifty years, dressed in black 
with a white waistcoat. His ruddy face was 
overspread with a scowl; he regarded his son 
with a glance full of meaning, at the same time 
passing his "kerchief incessantly over his bald 
crown. He had overheard the whole of the 
conversation between his son and his head 
clerk. He had indeed returned from Cape 
May, but had seen his clerk, only five minutes 
previous to this interview. His feelings as 
lie overheard the conversation may be ima- 
gined. 

“ Scoundrel !” was his solitary ejaculation, 
as he gazed upon his son, who now stood cow- 
ering and abashed, in one corner* of the count- 
ing room. 

O 

“ Father — ” hesitated Cromwell. ! 

The merchant pointed to the door. 

“ Go!” he said, and motioned with his 

finger. . 

“ Forgive me, fatner — I ve been wild. I 

know it — ” faltered Cromwell. 

“You saw me in a lit, did you? And you 
would have got that check cashed and taken 
up Tompkins <fc Co’s note — would you ? 


You’re a bigger scoundrel than I took you 
for. Go !” 

Cromwell moved to the door. While the 
head clerk stood thunderstricken, the father 
followed his son into the large room, which 
filled with hogsheads and bales, intervened be- 
tween the counting room and the street. Crom- 
well quietly threaded his way through the 
gloomy place, and was passing to the street 
when his father’s hand stopped him on the 
threshold. 

“ Cromwell,” said he, “ let us understand 
one another.” 

Cromwell turned with surprise pictured on 
his face, the countenance of his father was 
fraught with a meaning which he could not 
analyze. 

>‘In the first place,” said the Merchant, 
“ Read this.” 

He handed his son a copy of the New York 
Herald dated the day previous. The finger of 
Mr. Jacob D. Z. Hicks pointed a paragraph 
embodied in a letter from Cape May. Crom- 
well read in silence, his face displaying every 
change of incredulity succeeded by surprise. 

“By the bye you have heard that a distinguished 
scion of the British Aristocracy, who passes under the 
title of Sir Charles Wriothelsy has been figuring rather 
extensively at this place. The Baronet is a gallant 
gent eman, with a pale mouse colored mustache, and 
aristocratic air. — He has excited quite a sensation. He 
is altogether a man of on — elegant and fascinating, 
so much so, that yesterday the young wife of one of our 
old Philadelphia merchants was detected in a rather 
embarrassing situation with the gallant Briton, and 
worst of all, the discoverer was her venerable spouse. 
The affair has created a great talk. To-morrow I will 
send you full particulars . * * 


“ Well 


— what of this V said Cromwel], 

looking into his father’s face. 

“ Nothing much. Only that young wife of 
an old merchant, was your mother. J mar _ 

ried her at sixteen ; married her out of regard 

for her family, and have lived with her these 

nineteen years. She is now about thirtv-four 
but as young and lively as ever. The day-be- 
fore yesterday she disgraced me at Cape M 
and strengthened a resolve which I have Ion * 
indulged, to wit, to cast her and her son'to the 

winds, or the d 1. You comprehend 

Cromwell ! You are not my son. The conduct 

of your mother breaks all ties between u s 
(By the bye I may remark that yesterday s h e 


* 



J1 


eloped with her Baronet.) For ifineteen years 
I have supported you. You can gamble, drink 

and act the gentleman in every way. Your 
education is complete. My advice to you, is, 
to follow your mother, who yesterday eloped 
with her British Baronet. From me, from this 
hour, you can expect nothing. Beg, starve or 
steal — as you please — do it in a gentlemanly 
way i) you ike — but from me you shall 
never receive one cent. We understand one 
another. Good day Sir.** 

With tHese words the old man turned away, 
leaving Cromwell pale and thunderstricken on 
the threshold. The thunderbolt which had 
fallen upon him, deprived him for tire time of 
all control over his reason. 

At last, still holding the New York Herald 
in his hand, he took his way from the store of 
his late father. As he passed along the alley 
into Front street, he tried — for a long time 
without success — to realize his situation. 

Mis mother a disgraced woman — himself pro- 

# 

nounced an illegitimate by the man whom he 
had always known as his father — he could 
not believe it. But the New York Herald was 
in his hands, the words of the old Merchant 
still rang in his ears. Then, when he con- 
trasted the youth os his mother with the age 
of her husband, her fondness for admiration 
and show with the sedate and rather old fash- 
ioned habits of the Merchant, the story ap- 
peared more reasonable. A thousand things 
came to the memory of Cromwell, which seemed 
to confirm the story of Mr. Jacob Hicks. 
Suffice it to say, that after an hour’s walk up 
and down the street, Cromwell found himself 
at the corner of Second and Walnut street, with 
three facts impressed rather vividly upon his 
mind; He was without a father; his mother 
had eloped with a mustache ( appended to a 
British Baronet;) and he, Cromwell Hicks, 

late ol Yale College, was without a cent in 

the world. . : * u „ < , , ? i > ! 


PART m. 

THE LETTER OF THE DISHONORED WIFE. 

Here let us leave the son for a few hours, 
while we attend to his father. After Mr. Ja- 
cob D. Z. Hicks had delivered his mind to 
Cromwell, his supposed son, he turned from 


the door and retreated within the white pine 
railing of his counting room. 

“Mr. Grimly,” he said to his head clerk, 
“to-night we will receive by the Southern mail 
from five to six thousand dollars, in sight drafts 
upon New York. You will open the letters 
ant attend to these drafts if you please. We 
are rather hard up for cash now, and will need 
all the money we can rake and scrape to meet 
our engagements.’ ’ 

Mr. Grimly said a few words in acquies- 
cence, and then retired, leaving the Merchant 
alone in the counting room. 

That gentleman seated himself on the high 
stool with his back against the wall — folded 
his arms — projected his nether lip — and for 
an instant seemed wrapt in a brown study. 

A few words may throw some light upon 
the character of Mr. Hicks. He was not a 
bad man. He was not a Merchant, nor a 
Banker, nor a Broker; he was a combination 
of the three, lie was that embodiment of in- / 
imitable energy, and grasping meanness, which 
in modern days is called a “ business man.” 
Mr. Hicks was by birth a Quaker, and yet he 
was also a nominal member of the Episcopal 
church. Not that he particularly believed in 
that church, or held much faith in any church. 
Possibly, after this “business world” there 
might be a hereafter ; and Mr. Ilicks thought 
it no harm to be on the safe side. 

The great object of Mr. Hicks was to make 
money. The religion of his life was to in- 
crease his power among men of money. 

Did he spend this money in the gratification 
of his appetites? We cannot tell. 

No one knew how much Mr. Hicks was 
worth. His father had been very rich; his 
wealth — such was the popular rumor — had 
been acquired in the slave trade at a time when 
the slave trade was as legal, moral and religi- 
ous, as stock gambling at the present day. 
Alt long! i no one knew how much Mr. Hicks 
was worth, his wealth was never rated below 
$200,000 in real estate. Then he had an in- 
vest in two or hree country banks; he was 
largely concerned in the stock market; he was 
also something of a politician. 

Now, as Mr. Hicks sat alone in his count- 
ing room, his thoughts mingled the sweet with 
the bitter, in almost equal quantities. 

“I don’t care about her intimacy with the 







12 

Baronet Tke publicity of the thing galls me. 
For that matter, I’ve known her real character 
since the day when I married her to hide her 
shame, and have winked at her frequent par- 
tialities for gentlemen with mustaches — musi- 
cal gentlemen and gentlemen of the stage. I 
hate the talk and fuss which will be made all 
over town about this matter, but at the same 
I’m glat she’s gone. And then her beautiful 
boy is off my hands. That’s some comfort. 
I am now alone in the world, and will only 
have to 4 look out’ for myself.” 

Mr Hicks drew from a side pocket a letter 
which he had that day received from his un- 
faithful spouse. He had broken* the seal but 
had not read it. 

“Sentiment, I ’spose — chock full of senti- 
ment,” he muttered, as he opened the letter and 
held it toward the window — “ Romantic talk 
a *ut the ‘bruised heart,’ the ‘disparity of 

age,’ and what not. It’s full of such stud 1 
’spose.” 

But somewhat to 1 is surprise the letter was 
altogether of a different character. The reader 
may glean some ideas of the fugitive lady from 
the epistle which follows: 

Hicks : 

There’s no use of any nonsense between us. 
\ ou know why you married me nearly nineteen years 
ago. You know what kind of a life we have led to- 
gether — you pursuing your own way, and I mine, 
icee eighteen years. However, as I have somethin^ 

' D 

important to communicate to you, you will suffer me to 
recapitulate. 

At the time when we first met, I had ust turned six- 
teen. I was the daughter of one of the oldest and 
wealthiest amilies in Philadelphia — you know that I 
was good looking — and was therefore caressed, flat- 
tered, idolized. Among the gentlemen who came to my 
father’s house were yoursel a very plain business sort 
of man ; and a very handsome foreigner, who was con- 
nected with the French Embassy at Washington, and 
who carried the word “ Count” before his name. You 
wished to marry me because 1 was rich, and because 
yourself (although reputed to be rich) were on the verge 
n bankruptcy, notwithstanding the reputed fortune left 
you by your father. The Count could not marry me 
because he had a wife living in France ; but this did 
not prevent me from becoming very painfully involved 
with that gentleman. My father discovered my situa- 
tion soon after the Count had suddenly left for France. 
And my father, who knew of your embarrassments, 
proposed the match between you and I — stating all 
the circumstances to you — and you gladly consented. 
We were married. We immediately left the country, 


in order to spend the first months of our marriage in 
Pa ris. H ere my Cromwell was born : he passed in 
the eyes of the world a-s your son ; while both of us 
knew the real facts of the case. So conscious was you 


that he was a sort of usurper on the rights of your fu- 

A _ 

lure children that you named him “ Cromwell. A 
few months after his birth we returned to Philadelphia ; 
and almost a year afterward your son was born. This 
occurred while you were absent from the city — absent 
in ’he W^est on a business tour. When you returned, 
myself and the doctor informed you that the second 
child ^that is youTs) had died a few moments after its 
birth. You were shown its coffin in the family vault. 

Now I’ve a sort of confession to make to you, which 
I don t make from any sentimental idea of repentance 
and all that sort of thing, but because I really wish to 
do you a service. '1 hat second child did not die. He 
is now living. For eighteen years or so I have secretly 
contributed to his support. u For the facts of the case” 
i (as the newspapers say) listen. 

The second child, soon after its birth, was entrusted 
to the care of a friend of the nurse, who brought it up 
as her own, and who has received from me, for these 
eighteen years, the quarterly sum of sixty dollars. 
This friend of the nurse goes by the name of Mrs. 
Watson ; she is the wife of a drunken fellow ; and 
lives in Runnels Court, in the neighborhood of Sixth 
and South streets. Your son was living under her roof 
three mon hs ago, when I paid the last quarterly instal- 
ment. I don’t know — have never desired to know his 
name. To-morrow the quarterly instalment should 

again be paid. Mrs. Watson will expect it. Had you 
not better attend to it 1 

You will doubtless enquire my motive for having 
your own child taken out of sight, while I brought up 
mine in its place, in your house, as your son. I knew 
very well, that your child would have been petted and 
favored, while mine would have been insulted and neg- 
lected. \ ou could not have borne Cromwell before 
your sight, while your own child was in the house. 


1 he course widen I pursued relieved me -rom a great 
deal! of trouble, and spared you the pain of making an 
eternal comparison between the first child who has no- 


ble blood in his veins, and the second child, who is only 
a — Hicks. 

Now, I well know that you will not dare to cast off 
Cromwell; fear of the world’s talk will prevent you 
from doing such a foolish thing. At the same time I 
tell you all about your own child, and advise you to s* 
Mrs. Watson, without delay. You will receive this 
the time when Sir Charles and myself will be on 
way to Montreal, where we intend to spend the 

- 

mer and fall. I ask nothing from you, for myself « q 
my father before his death secured a very pretty fortune 
to me, in my own name. 

Hicks, adieu, 


Julia Cornelia Hic^g 


Mr. Ilicks read the letter and his face 
played all the changes of the kaleidesc 





13 


He was not much given to a display of his 
feelings, but when he came to the line which 
announced the existence of his own child, he 
turned pale as death, and felt his heart con- 
tract within him, as though suddenly com- 
pressed with the jaws of a vice. After he had 
finished the epistle from his profligate wife, he 
sat for at least five minutes, gazing upon the 
letter with a vacant stare. Could Cromwell 
have seen him at this moment, he would have 
been amply revenged for the scene of an hour 
previous. At length, in some measure reco- 
vering his presence of mind, Hicks slid from 
his seat, and hurrying through the store, con- 
fronted Mr. Grimly, who had just returned 
from the post office. 

“ Tom has not returned from the post 
office,” said Mr. Grimly — “I have just been 
down there, and cannot see any letters in the 

box. Tom has been gone a good while — 
what can it mean ?” 

At any other time these words would have 
arrested the attention of Mr. Hicks, but now 
brushing past his head clerk, with an “ I’m 
in a hurry, Grimly,” he made his way along 
the alley towards Front street. 

“ I'll see this Mrs. Watson,” he muttered — 
“See her at once — to-night — and see for 
myself what kind of boy this is. 1 can ac- 
knowledge him for my own or not, just as I 
please.” 

The etter of the abandoned wife had raised 
something like the feeling of paternity in the 
heart ol the Merchant. Hurrying down 
Front street, he turned up Sou-th, and after 
much enquiry succeeded in finding “ Runnel’s 
Court.’ 


PART IV. 
runnel’s court* 

Runners Court was one of those blots upon 
the civilization of the Nineteenth Century, 
which exist in the city and districts ol Phila- 
delphia, under the name o Courts. It ex- 
tended between two narrow streets, and was 
composed of six three story brick houses built 
upon an area o ground scarcely sufficient for 
the foundation of one comfortable dwelling. 
Each of these houses comprised three rooms 
and a cellar. The cellar and each of the 
rooms was the abode oi a family. And thus, j 


packed within that narrow space, twenty-four 
families managed to exist, or rather to die by a 
slow torture, within the six houses of Runnel’s 
Court. Whites and blacks, old and young, 
rumsellers and their customers, were packed 
together there, amid noxious smells, rags and 
filth, as thick and foul as insects in a decaying 
carcase. 

As Mr. xlicks entered the narrow pathway 
between the houses, (three of which facing the 
other three formed the court) he was nearly 
stifled by the hot and pestilential odors which 
accumulated in that wretched place, 

“Where does Mrs. Watson live?” he 
asked ; and was answered by a slatternly wo- 
man, who stood leaning against the door-post 
of a “groggery.” (Understand, a groggery 
in a court is a kind o hell within a hell. The 
“court” itself is bad and foul enough, but the 
groggery completes the hideous scene, and 

makes it fit for the approbation of the Devil 
himself.) 

“ On the third flure,” said the woman, point- 
ing upwards, as she surveyed the dress of Mr. 
(licks with a leer of drunken surprise. “ She’s 
a widdy now. Her husband fell off a buildin’ 
about three months ago an’ was kilt dead.” 

Mr. Hicks entered the house designated by 
the woman. Passing through the first and 
second rooms, (and through scenes of squalor 
and drunkenness that we have no wish to de- 
scribe) lie ascended into the room on the third 
door. In a room about ten feet square, fur- 
nished with one table and two chairs, and 
lighted by two windows, one of which caught 
a gleam of the setting sun, sat a woman who 
might have been no moire than forty vears of 

W if 

age, though she looked sixty. Dressed in a 
gown of faded calico, her thin and “scrawny” 
neck surmounted by a face which looked hag- 
gard with premature age, if not with vice or 
hardship, this woman turned her dull eyeballs 
toward Mr. Hicks, as he entered her room 
with a vague and almost idiotic stare. 

“ I can’t pay it to-day,” she mumbled, 

“ Haint got the tin.” 

“My good woman,” said Mr. Hicks, as he 
advanced with a bland smile — “You owe me 
nothing. I have merely called on a friendly 
visit. Allow me to ask, is your name Mrs. 
Watson?” 

4 * It aint anything else, boss,” was the rather 


14 


classic reply of the lady, who clutched iu her 
colorless fingers a half-filled vial, on which 
Mr. Hicks read the word “ Laudanum.” 
“You have children ?” asked Mr. Hicks, 
depositing himself on the unoccupied chair. 
The woman ooked at him with a <dance in 




which stupidity seemed to struggle wtth suspi 


cion. 


“ What’s that your business ?” she replied, 

' pulled her faded c ip ovex a tlmgy brown 
wig, which but illy concealed her gray hair. 

“ Let me come to the point at once,” re- 
sumed Mr, Hicks, “You have received for 

some years back the sum of sixty dollars per 
quarter?” 

“ I have that,” ‘and 
in her leaden eyeballs* 

“ you know who it was that sent you 
this sum ?” 

“ Blast me if I do. I only knew that it was 
iue yesterday, and that it did not come.” 




If 


“How was this sum usually sent to you? 

“ I mostly got it through the post office 
sometimes it was fetched to me by a person I 
did not know — ” and she straightened herself 
in her chair, and began to look sternly into 
the merchant’s face. “ What do you know 
about it ?” 

“Just this. If you answer my questions 
satisfactorily, I will see myself that the same 
sum is paid to you in future, to wit, sixty dol- 
lars per quarter. The person who has been 
sending it to you died last night.” 

“Eh? You don’t say ! Well now! We're 
all but poor mortal ereturs after all. Aint we ?” 
“ How many children have you ?” 

“ Kate and ’Lijah,” sharply responded Mrs. 
Watson. 

“How old is Kate, and what does she do ?” 
asked Mr. Hicks, rubbing the perspiration 
from his glowing face, with a red band tmia. 

“ Kate is fourteen, and works in the Fac- 


tory . 7 

“ And Elijah ?” said Mr. Hicks rubbing his 

bald crown, with a great deal of zeal. 

“ 5 Lijah must be somethin’ twixt eighteen 
and nineteen. But look here — what have 
r ou got to do with this business ?” 

“ Where does Elijah work?” 

“ He was makin* shoes at the last accounts. 


s 'dd Mrs. Watson turning her face from the 
light, 

“ You have’nt seen him lately then* But 
where does he work ?” r 

I he woman seemed to hesitate, Her pallid 
h|) trembled, while her eyes grew animated, 

J almost brilliant. 

U hat’s it your business ? ” she replied, 
turning her face to the wall* 

“ * 1 y my good woman, I know that Eli- 

jah is not your son. I know that you received 
him some nineteen — perchance only eighteen 
years ago — from the hands of a Nurse, who 
kept secret the name of his mother. And fur- 
ther, I know that on your answers to my in- 
quiries, depends your allowance of sixty dol- 
lars per quarter. Answer me plainly, is Eli- 
jah Watson dead ?” 

The woman turned her face toward the mer- 
chant. Her haggard features worked convul- 
sively, Something like a tear struggled over 
her sallow cheeks, 

“ Lijah aint my son — that’s true — but l\e 
brought him up as mine, and like him just as 
well as Kate.” 

“But where is he?” asked Mr. Hicks, con- 
tinuing the manual exercise of the handker- 
chief with great vigor. 

The woman looked at him steadily, said one 
word, and burst into tears. 

“ In the Penitentiary,” she said, and 

pointed with her colorless fingers to the north- 
west. 

The Merchant recoiled as if appalled by the 
sight of an Apparition. 

It was some time before he could resume 
the conversation. But when, in a tremulous 
voice, he again questioned the woman, he as- 
sured himself of the truth of two things. 1 
That Elijah Watson was indeed his son. 2 

That Elijah Watson was a convict in the 
eastern penitentiary. 

It was quite dark when he left the house of 
Mrs. Watson in Runnell’s Court. He went 
directly home to his mansion in Walnut street 
passed through those splendid rooms in which 
was neither wife nor child to welcome him 
and locking himself in his chamber, thought 
all night of Elijah Watson and the Eastern 
Penitentiary. ; 0*1 ' ■ i< A \ 1 


/ 



15 


« 


* 


PART V. 


MR. WHITELY THE BROKER. 


While Mr. Jacob D. Z. Hicks tosses on his 
bed, and sees “ Penitentiary” written on the 
black cloud of "every dream, let us turn back 
in our narrative and take* up the adventures of 
Cromwell. 

We left him at the moment when, desolate 
and penniless, lie stood in Walnut street, in t ie 
light ot a declining summer day, pondering 
v ery seriously over the prospects of his future. 

4i I should be in New York to-night, and I 

haven’t a rip to buy a cigar, much less four 
dollars to pay my passage.” 

He cast a glance over his apparel. Blue coat, 
plaid pants and bull vest looked remarkably 
dusty and travel-worn. He felt his pockets. 
They were deplorably empty. He looked up 
and down Walnut street, as the day beg'an to 
decline over the town, and brought himself to 
the conclusion expressed in these words, mut- 
tered through his set teeth — “ Without father 
or mother, friend or dollar, my chance of a bed 
and supper to-night gets dim and dimmer.” 

Again the thought then came over him, that 
he !iad promised to meet Don Jorge at Love- 
joy’s in New York on the third day from the 
period when they left New Haven together. 

* O 

This was the third day. How should he keep 

i' appointment? He had not a dollar in the 
world to pay his fare to New York. 

“ And even if I can make out to get to New 
York to-mght, nothing remains for me but to 
accept that cursed proposition.” 

i n this mood he took his way toward the Ex- 
change. He was roused from a reverie by a 
hand laid on his arm, and by the words, “ How 
d’ye do, Mister Crom ? ” 

Starting from his gloomy reverie, Cromwell 
beheld a youth of some fourteen years, whose 
turn-up nose and closely cut hair, together 
vuli corduroy pants and brown linen jacket, 
brought home to him the fact, that he beheld 
no less a personage than Mr. Tom Miller, who 
was employed in a double capacity — half as 
errand boy and half as under cleik — in his 
father’s store. Tom was delighted to see 
Cromwell — asked him when he had arrived 

m the city— how long he intended to stay 

Ui ii Ouicr questions quite as interesting. As 


for Cromwell/quietly keeping his eye upon 

the youth, who held a package in his right 
hand, he said : 

; “Give me the letters, Tom. I’ll take them 

6 f m m i a * * , 

down to the store. As for you, father wants 
you to go up to the Baltimore Depot, and bring 
nvn a box that is there, addressed to him. 
Jus^ te ! 1 the agent that father sent you, and he’ll 
give you the box. Mind that you hurry back.” 
Without a word the red-haired youth handed 
the letters to young Hicks, and hurried up 
Walnut street, on his way to Eleventh and 
Market. Cromwell slipped the letters into his 
pocket, gazed for a moment after the form of 

the errand boy, and then hurrying down Wal- 
nut street, turned into a “pot house,” whose 
sign displayed tempting inducements to “sailors 
and emigrants.” It was a miserable place, 

with one chair, a box, and a little man with a 
dirty face and one eye. 

“ What’ll yes pleze to have, sur ? ” 
Cromwell called tor a glass of whiskey, and 
iUn ' m, g his back to the landlord, drew the 
package from his pocket, and proceeded to 
utit the letters he had received from Pom. 
There were ten in all ; one was particularly 
heavy ; and all of them were carefully sealed. 
Did one, or did all of them contain money ? 
This was an important question, but Cromwell 
did not choose to solve it in the pot house. 
But how shall he pay for the glass of whiskey? 

: * h not a penny in the world. This placed 
him in a decidedly bad predicament. Waiting 
* 11 die landlord had turned his back for a mo- 


mem, Cromwell passed quietly from the place, 
and hurried up Walnut street, turned into Dock, 

and in a few moments was in Third street in 
the vicinity of Chesnut. 

He had decided upon a difficult step. The 
letters winch he held, bore the post-marks of 


distant parts of the Union, and very possibly 
they contained drafts upon houses in New York. 
h was his resolution to ascertain this fact iu 

-fe 

Pie first place, and in the second to get these 
drafts cashed. It was after bank hours, and 


only two broker’s offices in the vicinity re- 
mained open. Cromwell’s brain was in a whirl ; 
conscious i hat whatever he did must be done 
without delay, he stood on the sidewalk, with 
his finger raised to his forehead, anxiously en- 
gaged in cogitating some scheme which might 
enable him to cash the drafts in the filers 




10 


# 


that is, if said ietters happened to contain drafts, 
or money in any shape. 

► But was this the case? Cromwell turned 
into an alley and with a trembling hand broke 
t he seals of the letters. His hair reeled as their 


contents were disclosed to Iris gloating eyes, 
or tuose letters did contain drafts at one, two 


and three c ays sight, drawn upon certain firms 
in New York, and amounting altogether to five 

O O 

thousand and sixty dollars. Crumbling the 
letters, drafts and all into his pocket, Cromwell, ! 
staggered from the alley ike a drunken man. 
He had resolved upon his course of action. 
Entering a small periodical agency, he called 
for pen and paper, and (while the boy in at- 
tendance was waiting upon a customer) our hero 
proceeded in quite a business-like manner to ^ 
sign the name of “Jacob D. Z. Hicks” upon 
each of those talismanic slips of paper. Habit 
had made him familiar with his late father’s 
signature ; he wrote with ease and facility ; in 
a few moments the work was done. He care- 
fully sanded the signatures, and then made the 
best of his way to the office of a celebrated bro- 
ker with whom his father had dealt for many 
years. On the threshold he paused ; his iieart 
beat like the pendulum of a clock ; gazing 
through the glass door he beheld the familiar 
face of the Broker, bald head, high shirt collar, 
gold spectacles and all. For a moment the 

m 

young gentleman hesitated ; at length com- 
manding all the force of his nerves, he entered, 
and opening the magic slips oi paper upon the 
counter, said with great self-possession — “Mis- 
ter Whitely, father starts for Niagara early in 
the morning. He would like it as a favor, if 


you would cash these drafts to-night.” ] 

The broker recognized young Hicks, ad- 
dressed him by name, and after a word or two 
as to his father’s health, examined the draft — 
first one side and then the other. This done, 
he paused, and surveyed Cromwell through 
his gold spectacles, Cromwell never forgot 
that scrutinizing gaze. “He suspects some- 
thing,” he muttered to himself, while in fact 
the worthy Broker, who was somewhat 
absent-minded, was cogitating whether or no he 
should ask as to the truth of that story about 


the Briton. 

“ Five thousand and sixty dollars, said 
the Broker. 


“Can you do it?” gasped Cromwell, much 
agitated, but endeavoring to look as calm as 
possible. 

“ Certainly,” was 'be answer — “ would 
your father like city or New York funds?” 

“As you please,*' la] .ered Cromwell. “ Only 
he wanted a thousand in twenties.” 

The Broker unlocked his iron safe and 
counted out five thousand and sixty dollars — 
forty $100 dollar bills and the balance in $20 
notes — Cromwell watching him all the while 
with a feverish eye. 

Young Hicks extended his hand, and could 
scarce believe the evidence of his senses when 
he felt the silken slips of paper between his 
fingers. He thrust them into his breast pocket 

Jk 

and hurried to the door. 

“Ah — come back, young man,” he heard 
the voice of the broker. 

It was the first impulse of the hopeful youth 
to put to his heels, but turning, with a pallid 
face, he again confronted the spectacled broker. 

“Young man, that is, Mr. Hicks,” began 
the Broker, “If it’s not impolite I’d like to ask 
you one question.” 

Cromwe i shook in “his boots” but man- 
aged to falter out the monosyllable, “Well?” 

“Is there any truth in that story, eh — eh 
— about the Brit-British Baronet — and — ” 
he paused. 

Cromwell raised his handkerchief to his 
eyes, and in a voice broken by emotion, fal- 
tered — 

“ Mr. W y, a son should never speak of 
his mothei s faults — ” and as if overcome by 
his feelings hastened from the Broker’s store. 

Making the best of his way down Third, he 
struck into Dock street, and then turned down 
Walnut street. As he approached the corner 
of Front and Walnut streets, he heard the rino*- 
ing of a bell. Utterly bewildered by the inci- 
dents of the ast hour, he was hurrying at ran- 
dom — he knew not whither — when the rintr- 
ing of the bell decided him, as to his future 
course. 

“It’s the New York bell!” he muttered, 

and in five minutes had purchased his ticket 

f 

and was on board the steamboat on bis way to 
New York. 

That night at ten he lathed at the loot of 
Courtlandt street. Without pausing to cat or 



17 


sleep, he proceeded to a Barber shop, and 
his face cleanly shaved. Then, in an hour’s 
ramble, he provided limsell with a large trunk, 
a black wig, a pair of false whiskers, and two 
suits of clothes. He assumed the wig and 
whiskers in the street; put on a single-breasted , 
frock coat, buttoning to the neck, in a tailor’s 
store ; covered his forehead with a glazec- cap, 
and then calling a cab directed the driver to 
take his trunk to Lovejoy’s Hotel. 

• , 

PART VI. 

CROMWELL, DON JORGE AND THE POLICE 

OFFICER. 

He entered his name on the books in a bold ' 
dashing hand 

O 

“ Auguste Belair, Montreal 

Then seating himself in an arm chair, amid 
the noise and smoke of the reading room, heat 
once contemplated his black hair and whiskers, 
through the medium of a mirror, and endea- 
vored to frame some plan, by which he might 
be enabled to decline both of Don Jorge’s pro- 
positions. He had no desire to take the very 
honorable position of first mate on board o) 
the Sara Jane. lie was not decidedly anxious 
to fight his friend, either at fisticuffs or co ee 
and pistols. What should he do ? With five 
thousand dollars in his pocket there came over 
the young gentleman’s soul, a glorious an 1 en- 
trancing vision of Paris. Paris by day and by 
gaslight, Paris above ground and below ! 

“ Yes, I’ll cut the Sara Jane, and strike for 
Paris !” he said, half aloud — “ At the age of 
nineteen and with five thousand in the pocket 
Paris will be interesting — most undoubtedly. 
Then I may chance to come across my “ Ma” 
and her Baronet. Certainly I'll cut the Sara 

Jane.” 

But the young gentleman was not yet on 
board the Steamship, and there’s many a slip 
between young gentlemen who sign other 
folk’s names and the deck of a steamer. 

A slim, dapper formed, dark whiskered gen- 
tie man passed between Cromwell and the mir- 
ror. It was Don Jorge. lie did not recog- 
nize his friend. But it was no part of Crom- 
well's plan to avoid the young Cuban. So 
springing from his chair he greeted him with a 
familiar slap on the back, and said gaily — “I 


am true to my appointment. How are you, 
Don !” 

It was some moments before Don Jorge 
could recognize his friend in the metamor- 
phosed individual before him. At length the 
recognition was complete, and drawing their 
chairs into an obscure corner of the room, the 
friends began to compare notes. Don Jorge 
summed up the case or himself in a few 
words : 

“ I saw my father, spoke to him, and he 
would’nt even so much as recognize me. Here 
is nothing before rae but the Sara Jane, and a 
trip from you know where to Brazil or Cuba.” 

What was his surprise, when Cromwell 
communicated the details of his last exploit ! 
The eyes oi the Cuban fairly danced with ex- 
citement. Cromwell had no reserves, and so 
he told him the entire story concluding with 
these words 

“ So, with five thousand in my pocket, 
Georgy, there’s no use of my having anything 
to do with the Sara Jane. The Steamer sails 
to-morrow ; come along my boy. What say 
you ? A trip to Paris?” 

The head of the Spaniard dropped moodily 
upon his breast, and he shaded his eyes with 

his hand. Whether the sudden possession of 
five thousand disconcerted his plans, or not, 
we cannot tell, but after a few moments he 
spoke in a low, earnest voice, and compared 
the chances of Cromwell’s arrest — did he 
once take passage on board the steamer — 
with the certainty of success and fortune, in 
case iie linked his destiny with Don Jorge and 
the Sara Jane. 

“ Come ! She lies anchored in the East 
River. I saw the owners not two hours ago 
and we must be off. Our baggage has been 
forwarded from New Haven, and you’v© only 
to say the word, and we’ll move. Come.” 

He rose from his chair, and moved a step 
toward the door. 

But Cromwell did not rise. 

“ No, S-i-r,” he answered, cooly placing his 
feet upon the table, “You don’t catch ‘this 
child’ in any scrape of that kind, while he 
has five thousand in his pocket ” 

“ Fool !” responded Don Jorge — “ Why 
the very bank notes which you have about you 
will betray you. They will be advertised. 



18 


You can’t get them changed for gold or for 
English funds without the certainty of arrest.” 

Cromwell started from his chair, quietly but- 
toning his frock coat. 

“ I think you called me — fool?” he said, 
advancing to Don Jorge with a threatening air. 

But ere Don Jorge could reply, a short per- 
sonage who had been attentively reading a pa- 
per for some minutes past — at a distance of 
at least two yards from our worthies — sud- 

]i burned, and tapping Cromwell on the 
shoulder addressed him with the words — 
“ You are my prisoner ! ” 

Cromwell felt a shudder pervade him, as he 
surveyed the short personage, whose hat drawn 
low over the hrow — and a “shocking bad hat” 

it was — aid not altogether conceal a hangdog 
visage. 

“ Your prisoner !” echoed the hopeful youth, 
while Don Jorge stood regarding the two with 
calm satisfaction. 

“ I have watched you since you landed at 
Courtlandt street. That ’ere false wig and 
them lalse whiskers belong, in my humble 
opinion, to a suspicious character. You’d bet- 
ter come along. The Ma’or, or the chief o’ 
poleese, ’ud be very much pleased to see you.” 

Cromwell lost color and nerve. Once be- 
fore the Mayor, he would be searched — de- 
tained — and Mr. aeob D. Z. Hicks would 
have time to come on from Philadelphia, and 
regain his money. 

“ Come, Mister,” said the personage (who 
may have been a police officer, or a pickpocket, 
for all we know) when Don Jorge stepped 
between the pair. * 

“ If I get you out of this scrape will you 
consent?” he whispered — “Say it quick, yes 

or no — ” 

Cromwell surveyed the ill-looking personage, 

and then faltered, “Yes!” 

“ Step this way, sir,” he said, and the gen- 
tleman obeyed, still keeping his eye upon Crom- 
well — “Now, mark me, I know that you are 
an impostor, but for reasons of my own I 
choose to humor you. What do you charge 
for your impertinence ? Name a reasonable 
sum, and let my friend go, and I’ll pay it 

down — ” 

The fellow hesitated, and then with a leer 
meant to be very knowing, said — “ Twenty 
dollars ’ill do it.” 


Don Jorge borrowed the twenty of Crom- 
well, paid it, and bade the fellow begone, with 
these words, which he uttered in a whisper — 
“ Go ! And if 1 see your face again I’ll point 
you out to the police.” 

The personage seemed to understand, for he 
left the reading room in a hurry, while Crom- 
well stood silent and confused, a wondering 
spectator of the scene. 

“We’ ve no time to lose,” said Don Jorge — 
“ We must move right off. That fellow may 
be back in live minutes. Come, Grom. Hur- 
rah for the Sara Jane, and — you know 
where ! ” 

Grom, submitted like a child. Their trunks 
lashed behind a hack, and themselves seated 
within, they were whirling down Broadway in 
five minutes, at a speed which hackney coaches 
never attained before. In fifteen minutes they 
were at the Battery, where a boat was waiting 
for them. They entered, and through the 
ciear starlight were rowed towards a brightlight, 

Cj o O 7 

which shone vividly at the distance of per- 
chance five hundred yards. Up the deck of 
the Sara Jane, and into a luxuriantly furnished 
cabin — it was the work of five minutes more. 
And seated in chairs which were arranged be- 

O 

side a well furnished board, Cromwell and 
Don Jorge looked into each other’s faces — 
the former silent and wondering, the latter gay 
and triumphant. 

“ Is it not a dream ?” began Cromwell. 

“ Carlos,” cried Don Jorge, and in answer 
a mulatto boy, dressed in livery, appeared. 
“ Pen and paper,” continued Don Jorge. The 

o 

boy obeyed, 

“ Now, before we discuss our prospects over 
a bottle of this wine, f want you, Crom, to 
write a Letter to your father at my dictation.” 

The letter was written; sent on shore ; and 
while Cromwell and )on Jorge discussed their 
wine, the Sara Jane was gliding over the bay, 
in the direction of the Narrows. 

The letter which Cromwell signed we shall 
see after a while. 

PART VI L 

THE PEEP THROUGH THE WALL OP THE PEtfi- 

fl V TEXTIARY. 

»nce more our narrative returns to the sup- 
posed father. 

The next morning, between the hours of 



19 


ten and eleven, a hackney coach deposited Mr. 
Hicks at the portal of the Eas era Penitenti- 
ary. 1 :■ t j ■ > / \* !•' vi" ; !- 

It was a bright and beautiful summer morn- 
ing, and a clear blue sky smiled above the 
gloomy fabric, whose massive walls and sullen 
gate and ponderous towers present an impos- 
ing image of the feudal castle of the dark 

© O 

ages. q , • I 

Situated on one of the most elevated sites 
in the county of Philadelphia — half way be- 
tween Girard College and the Fairmount Ba- 
sin — the Eastern Penitentiary is built of gray- 
ish granite, and covers: about ten acres of 
ground. It stands almost alone, in the midst 
of desolate commons, with a Hospital near its 
front, the Dead House in its rear, and Potter’s 
Field not far away in the north-east. The 
corner-stone of this edifice was laid on the 22d 
of M ay, 1823 : it was completed after nearly 
or quite ten years, at an expense which lias 

never been clearly stated to the public. Per- 
chance two millions of dollars were spent in 
its completion. ■ 

Within those gloomy walls, for years past, 
has been going on a solution of the question 
— 4* Is Solitary Confinement, attended with 
Labor, beneficial at once to the Commonwealth 
and the Criminal V 9 

We cannot say that the question has been 

satisfactorily answered in the affirmative. 

For within the walls of this Bastile, and in 

years not very long ago — outrages l ave been 
committed upon Humanity, which would have 
been a disgrace to the Bastile or the dungeons 
of the Inquisition in their worst days. 

The difference between Hanging, as a pun- 
ishment, and Solitary Confinement may be 

summed up in a few words : 

* To hang a man when you can punish his 
crime, and prevent his again violating the law, 
by other methods, is at best a cruel and cow- 
ardly punishment. Hanging is a quick, hor- 
rible and unnecessary death. 

Ilanodnff, however, bad as it is, and as much 

DO 7 

opposed as it is to the Law of Christ and Hu- 
manity, is only a murder of the Body. 

Solitary Confinement is a murder of Body 
and Soul. r ■ 

It is one of those punishments which man 
has no right to inflict upon man. It is the 

cruel tv of the most barbarous age, sharpened 

2 


and refined by the light and civilization of the 
nineteenth century. It is a slow death — a 
death of body and soul — a mouldering away 
of the soul within a withering body. 

“Would you then, 5 ’ exclaims some friend of 
the system, which, often called Philanthropic, 
is truly and thoroughly Infernal — “Would 
you then. Jo away at once with Hanging and 
with Solitary Confinement?” 

Yes. By preventing instead of punishing 
crime. By spending the money which you 
now lavish upon gibbets, almshouses and jails, 
upon a broad system of education, which shall 
embrace all classes of society. By destroying 
those unjust laws which, by enriching one 
class continually tempt a portion of the other, 

and the largest class, to .commit crime — crime 

% 

sometimes committed to regain their own. 
But, in any case, and in the face of all emer- 
gencies, any punishment is better than Hang- 
ing or Solitary Confinement. 

Mr. Jacob Hicks, properly and neatly 
dressed, with all the evidences of respectabil- 
ity about dim, soon found entrance into the 
Penitentiary, where, presenting his permit, he 
asked to see “ Elijah Watson, who has lately 
been convicted of a felony, and sentenced to 
some years in the Eastren Penitentiary.” 

And in answer, Mr. Hicks was consigned to 
the care of an attendant, or under-keeper, who 
conducted him to the great central court yard, 
from which the various corridors of the Peni- 
tentiary diverge. They entered together one 
of those vast corridors which traverse the Bas- 

tile. mod) . 7 ' 

“ Do wish merely to see the Prisoner, that 
is number Fifty-One ?” 

(When a man enters the Bastile he leaves 
his Name at the door. He becomes a Num- 
ber.) 

“ That is all,” answered Hicks in a low 
voice. “I only ivish to peep at him.” 

The under-keeper opened a small aperture 
in the wall — used for the purpose of inspect- 
ing the prisoners — and through this aperture, 
Mr. Hicks gazed in silence, and beheld the 
piisoner, . , , 

It was a vaulted cell about twelve feet long, 
six feet wide, and the highest part of the ceiling 
was sixteen eet from the floor. Light was 
communicated by a large circular glass, fixed 
in the crown of the arch. This light fell upon 



20 


t 


the Prisoner. He was seated at a shoemaker’s 
bench, engaged at making shoes, and his face 
upraised fee a moment, received on every fea- 
tuie, the full glow of the light. It was the 
face of a hoy of eighteen, hardened by hard- 
en ip; he cheeks pale and sunken, the dark 
hair shaved closely around the forehead, and 
the eyes — leaden and lustreless — sunken 
deeply beneath die brows. There was a his- 
tory in that face. 

Clad in the prison garb, he was there alone, 

a 

raising his dull eyes to the light, while his 
Father — the Rich Man, the Banker, the Mer- 
chant — gazed upon him, without the Convict 
being aware of his presence, 

“ He looks like my family,” thought Mr. 
Jacob D. Z. Hicks, and made a sign to the 
under-keeper to close the aperture. 

He then turned away, and with the attendant 
retraced his steps. 

44 What was he convicted for ?” he asked. 

“ Passing counterfeit money. Didn’t you 
see it' in the papers? He passed a counter- 
feit note on the Tunkunny Bank ; a ten dollar 
bill, I believe.” 

Now the Tunkunny Bank was one of Mr. 
acob lick’s banks, situated in an obscure 
country town; the greater part of the stock 
owned by himself ; and although in good credit, 
Mr. Hicks knew that said Bank was in reality 
worth about ten cents in the dollar. 

And for passing a counterfeit note on this 

Bank — in itself a counterfeit and cheat — his 

♦ 

son was condemned to solitary confinement in 
the Eastern Penitentiary. Condemned that is, 
to be buried alive for the space of four y ears. 

The Merchant made no answer to the atten- 
dant, but was silently conducted to the gate o 

the Bastile. • 1 ' . ' 

« How many years did you say ?” he asked 

of the under-keeper, as one toot beyond the 
portal, lie stood between the outer world, and 
that Inner World, where Souls were rotting 
slowly away, in withering bodies. 

“ Four years,” was the answer. “ Judge i 
Tomahawk sentenced him. He’s supposed to 
be twenty-one, though I don’t believe he s more 

than eighteen. He’s been in a month,” j 

Mr. Jacob l>. Z. Hicks entered his carriage 

and drove away from the Penitentiary, leaving 
his son to his fate. He never saw him again 
until four years -were over. ' 


It was not until late in the afternoon that he 
went to his store. 

Arrived at the counting room, he found Mr. 
Grimly in communication with the Broker, 
who had cashed the drafts presented by Crom- 
well the night before. It only required a few 
moments to put the Merchant in possession of 
i he facts. And while Mr. Grimly was talking, 
a letter postmarked “ New York” was put into 
the Merchant’s hands. He read it and turned 
pale as ashes. 

“ It was all right, I ’spose,” said the Bro- 
ker, Mr. Whitely — “You told your son to 
get these drafts cashed ?” 

Mr, Hicks reflected a moment, while the 
tortures of a lost soul were at work within his 
breast. He hid his face in his bandanna, and 
wiped the perspiration from his brow. 

“ Fi ve thousand and sixty dollars! At this 
time it will almost ruin me!” the thought 
flashed over him but did not escape his lips. 
“The dog! the scoundrel ! He has his mo- 
ther’s blood in his veins, may the devil take 

him !” 

“Did you say it was all right !” again re- 
marked the Broker. 

“Yes, yes — ah right,” replied the Mer- 
chant Those drafts were cashed at my 
orders.” 

— As soon as he was alone, relieved at once 
from Grimly and the Broker, Mr. Hicks once 
more perused the letter “ postmarked” New 
York, which had at first sight, excited such 
violent emotion. : • r ’ < 

Dear Father : 

You told me to fo low my mother. 

I’m after her. 

Yours affectionately, 

Cromwell Hicks. 

f*. S. That $5060 I have invested in the trade be- 
tween somewhere* and the Brazil coast. Refer to your 
friend Captain Velasquez. 

At the name “ Captain Velasquez,’ the 
Merchant bit his nether lip. 

“ Where,” lie gasped, “Where did lie learn 
that name ?” • ! 


' i ns PART VIII. 

— ■ 

THE PRIVATE DEVOTIONS OF JACOB D. 2. IIICRS. 

There, was a room in Mr. Hicks’ mansion, 
which was never visited by any one, save him- 
self. Located in an odd out-of-the-way tornfcr 



of tl ie huge pile of brick and mortar which con- j 
stiluted his town residence, this room was dedi- 
cated by Mr. Hicks to the thought and medita- 
tion of his most secret hours. Neither his 
wife, noi* Cromwell, had ever passed its thres- 
hold. Mr. Kicks carried the key about him — 
in his pocket or next his heart — for what we 
know. Was Mr. Hicks troubled in business ? 
Straight he went up stairs and locked himself 
in his room — his room, by way of distinction, 
vou understand. Had Mrs. Hicks been rather 

V 

violent in her displays of bad temper? To 
his room hied Mr. Hicks without a moment’s 
delay. Was Mr. Grimly in a “fluster ’ 1 about 
some complicated matter of stocks, mortgages, 
notes of hand, or copper mines ? No sooner 
had he opened his bosom to Mr. Hicks than , 
Mr. Hicks went directly home, and locked him - 1 
self up in his room. After three or four hours 
Mr. Grimly would receive his answer. 

It was to this room that Mr. Hicks now 

% 

hurried, with the letter of Cromwell in his 
hand. He entered the mansion without speak- 
ing to the servant — it was the heat of summer, 
and his usual list of servants had diminished to 

m , i | 

three, a cook, a waiter and a coachman — and 
massing through the splendidly furnished but 
silent chambers of his home, Mr. Hicks went 
up stairs, and did not once pause, until he stood 
before the narrow door of his room. It opened 
upon a stairway, and was sunken in the depths 
of a solid wall. Drawing forth the key, Mr. 
Hicjvs went in, and locked the door alter him. 

He was in darkness. But familiar in every 
nook and corner of the place, he soon disco- 
vered a box of Lucifer matches, and by their 
aid lighted a half-burned spermaceti candle. 

The light revealed a narrow room, with un- 

o 

papered walls and uncarpeted door. A small 
table and a chair was all that the place con- 
tained in the wav of furniture. There was a 

¥ 

single window, without sash or glass, but with 
a closed shutter, which was wood on the out- 
side and iron within. Through small holes, 
pierced in the shutter, came the qnly breath of 
air which modified the stifling heat of the den. 
It was “fire proof; ” the walls nearly four feet 
thick ; and the door as well as the shutter 
lined with iron. 

Mr. Hicks seated himself in the chair, placed 
the light and his hat upon the table, and spread- 
ing forth the letter of Cromwell, gazed at it 


earnestly and long, the perspiration streaming 
in bearded drops from his lip re head and cheeks. 

“ Velasquez !” lie said — “ how in the name 
of all that’s infernal did he come by that name; 1 * 

The light si rone over Mr. Hicks’ face and 

* O 

form — both respectable in point of flesh — 

and showed his faultless broadcloth and cravat* 

and vest as white as snow. There was nothing 

peculiar in Mr. Hicks’ face ; it was just such a 

visage as you see a thousand times a day, 

Third street near Chesnut. The eves wers* 

¥ 

grey, the forehead bold, the cheeks slightly in- 
clined to fullness, and the lips neither small nor 
large — lips which in their compression and in 
their unclosing said as plainly as lips can say, 
without speaking — “ Three per cent a month 
is very good interest. I like it.” 

Understand, Mr. Hicks was no peculiar char- 
acter ; it was the object of his life to make 
money, and to keep up a fine appearance with 
the world ; he was just as good a man as hun- 
dreds whom you meet every day, on Third 
street, or in the Exchange, or in any other 
Temple of Scrip and Stock ; and was, withal, 
no better than any ninety-nine out of a hun- 
dred convicts in the Penitentiary. Out and 
out, through and through, Mr. Hicks was a 
business man — a perfect business man. Could 
we say more ? 

After pondering for a long time over the letter, 
in which the name of Captain Velasquez was 
introduced, Mr. Hicks drew forth another 
key, and unlocked the door of a small iron 
safe, which stood beneath the table. It was an 
ugly rusted thing, looking something like one 
of those chests in which the Genii in the Ara- 
bian Nights are imprisoned ; and had to all 
seeming seen many years of service. This 
chest was the Ark of the Covenant in the eyes 
of Mr. Hicks — it contained the Covenant 
which he had made with the Devil — it con- 
tained his God. 

He unlocked the safe, and drew forth the 
only thing it contained ; a heavy volume, which 
resembled a merchant’s Ledger, only it was 
bound in faded red morocco, ant! fastened with 
rusted iron clasps. 

Mr. Hicks grasped the book eagerly, and 
undid the clasps, and stretched it forth upon 
the table, and gave himself to the enjoyment of 

its contents, like a gourmand to his feast. 

In that book were entered all the “ business 



22 


operations” of Mr. Hicks for the last ten, yes, 

fifteen years. Not only those operations which 
are told to the world, under the head of the 
il stock market,” but certain operations which 
Mr. Hicks and the Devil carried on for their 

especial benefit, having a perfectly good under- 
standing with each other. 

For instance, here was related in Mr. Hicks’ 
own hand- writing, how he had procured the 
charters of three banks, situated in different 
parts of ti e country — owned and controlled 
by him — and not worth three cents on the 
dollar, although managed by our friend, they 
had in circulation at least $300,000 in bank 
notes. 

1 Again: here was related how Mr. Hicks had 
bought a field in Jersey for $600, and called it 
a Copper Mine, and sold it, in $1000 shares, 
(to house-maids, hod-carriers, day-laborers, and 
such vulgar folk) at $25 per share. Mr, Hicks 
was, in fact, in his own person, the “Grand 
TSew Jersey and Gineywovan Copper Mining 
Company.” 

Here, once more, were Mr. Picks’ little 
speculations in the way of Insurance Compa- 
nies — • Fire, Health., and Life Insurance Com- 
panies — in all of which Mr. Hicks himself 
was the manager behind the scenes. 

And here, in palpable red and black Ink, 
were the transactions of Mr. Hicks and Cap- 
tain Velasquez. These transactions had 
built up the fortune of Mr. Hicks. They 
were profitable, exceedingly profitable. They 
had been continued for a series of years, and 
had scarcely been interrupted by the seizure of 
a vessel now and then, and they had poured 
doubloons into Mr. Hicks’ lap, in a sort of 
hail — a golden hail. 

“ And this scoundrel knows the name of 
Captain Velasquez !” said JHr. Ilicks, after a 
long examination of the Book. “How has he 
gained his knowledge 1” 

Mr, Ilicks saw danger looming from the 
horizon. 

Leaning back in his chair, his eyes half 
closed, and the ends of his fingers placed to- 
gether across his breast, Mr. Jacob D. Z. Ilicks 
endeavored to arrange a plan for his future 
course. 

After a long pause — the sweat streaming in 
hot drops from his brow — he thus delivered 
himself — 


(t These three Banks must break. Copper 
stock, Life, Health, and Fire Insurance must 
follow their example. As for Mr. Jacob D. 
Z. Hicks, why heart-broken by the dissipation 
of his son, and the profligacy of his wife, he 
must suddenly disappear. A hat will be found 
on the wharf, and the world will lament the 
fall of the broken-hearted merchant, while Mr. 
Jacob D. Z. Hicks is safe in Havana. 

He smiled one of his pleasant smiles — 
locked his own chest (having first put his God 
away) and then extinguished the candle. 

“ I can do nothing for that boy in the Peni- 
tentiary,” he said, when the darkness envel- 
oped him, “He must serve out his time.” 

Mr. Hicks left the room and locked it, and 
went on his way rejoicing. 

But a month after this incident the three 
banks failed, Insurance Companies and Copper 
Mines went by the board, and the hat of Mr. 
Hicks ( with an affecting letter in the lining) 
was found on the wharf. Who suffered by 
the failure of the Banks matters not ; they 
were “ poor devils” doubtless, that vulgar sort 
oi folk who work for a living. It is their 

o 

business to suffer. 

Four years passed away. From 1845 to 
1849 is a long step, but our Narrative leaves 
its various characters for four years, and it re- 
sumes their history in September, 1849, when 
the Killers appear upon the scene. 

While four years pass, the Convict, Elijah 
Watson, makes shoes and educates himse/f in 
the Eastern Penitentiary. 

And Cromwell, old Mr. Hicks and Don 
Jorge — where are they ? Where are they? 


PART IX. 

THE SILENT COMPOSITOR. 

Tn the latter part of September, 1849, a 
pale faced man, dressed in shabby black, came 
to a printing office in the city of Philadelphia, 
and obtained employment as a Compositor. 

It was one of those printing offices which, 
from garret to cellar, abound with the evi- 
dences of life, bustle, and business. From the/ 
power-presses underground, to the Composi- 
tor’s room in the sky, this establishment was 
devoted to setting type, printing books, papers 
and handbills, folding, stitching, binding — and 



ve’re not sure — but stereotyping in the bar- 
gain. You could hand in your MSS. at one 
door, and get your book, bound and lettered, 
at another. 

Whether this huge building was situated up 
an alley, or on a public street, is a question 

which, at the present moment, does not need 
an answer. ' 

Let us enter the Compositor’s room on the 
fourth story. The rain beats with a gloomy 
patter against its many windows. It is a long 
room, narrow in proportion to its width, with 
u cases” stationed near each window. In front 
of each case^ (there were eight or ten in all) 
stands a compositor, working in silence at his 

task ; and in the centre of the room, near a 
huge slab Os black marble elevated on a tabic, 
you behold the foreman, who is en^atred in 

* ' o o 

making up the form. 

The pale compositor in the shabby dress 
is at his case in one corner, the light from the 
window falling over his projecting forehead. 
lie does his work — goes to his meals — re- 
turns again — and in the same quiet unobtru- 
sive manner. 


Now among the compositors in this office 
there is at least one boy compositor to every 
man. The boys are employed to do men’s 
work, in a bungling manner, at half wages. 
The men, thus thrown out of employ, may 
get drunk or steal, but that is no business of 
the Proprietor. He, good man, is employed 
in printing tracts, books, and newspapers — 
and among his greatest patrons are certain be- 
nevolent societies, who give away tracts and 
books, and print newspapers at $1.00 per year. 
Thus liberal, these societies must have their 
printing done at half price. The Proprietor 
cannot afford to pay full wages; he employs 
one hall boys, and makes up the rest by cut- 
ting down the wages of the girls in the bind- 
ery. Thus he is enabled to print “The Gos- 
pel Christian” (a weekly paper) together with 
omnibus loads of tracts and books, at some- 
thing lower than half price. So glorious a 
thing is a Benevolent or lieligious (!) Society 5 
which gives away the life and bread of book- 
binder girls and printers 

Now on the day on which we behold these 


compositors, men and boys, at their work, 
^ while the Foreman. Mr. Snick, a wiry little 
man, with the reminiscences of a black whis- 


ker under Ins chin, is making up the form of 
“ The Gospel Christian”) an event, rather im- 
portant to the comprehension of our Narra- 
tive, is fust maturing towards completion. 

The hour of twelve arrives ; the pale com- 
positor takes his hat and coat, and goes to his 
dinner. The Foreman disappears into the 

lower story. But the other compositors, men 
and boys, gathered around the “imposing 
stone,” (as the black marble slab is styled) min- 
gle in rapid conversation, and hold what may 
be termed a Council of War. 

“ You don’t say so ?” whispers a tail com- 
positor — “By Joye ! I thought something of 
that kind was the matter!” 

“I never liked his looks — ’’adds one of 
the boys — a very promising youth, who takes 
a pugilistic entertainment with one of the other 
boys, whenever the Foreman turns his back. 

“ Nor I — lie has a downcast look !” adds 
another: 

, “ Kis eyes are too deep set !” 

“ He never speaks to any one, in a voice 
above his breath.” 

While the compositors — boys and men — 
thus deliver their opinions, there is one who 
does not speak until all the others have con- 
cluded. He is a thin, slender personage — 
grown pale from working late at night on a 
daily paper — and with dull eyes, that see n to 
have had all their life boiled out of them, over 
a slow fire. 

“ Why don’t you speak, Corny ?” asks one 
oi the boys — “Why don’t you give your 
opinion about the new compositor?” 

Conscious that he l as an important secret in 
his possession, Mr. Corny Walput folds his 
arms, and looks at his companions with a wink 
of his boiled eyes, and a twist of his colorless 
lips. 

“ What’s the name of the new compositor V f 
he asks. 

“ Trottle — Job Trottle,” responds one of 
the boys. 

“ Where did he come from ?” continued Mr* 
Walput. 

“ From Washington. He says he’s been 
employed in the Union office,” was the an- 
swer. • - ' 

Mr. Corny Walput put his thumb to his 
nose. 

“ Gammon !” he ejaculated. “ Ilis name 


a 



24 


aint Job Trottle, and he didn’t come from 
Wash ingtpn,” 

a Who is he V 9 the compositors cried in a 
breath. 

But Mr. Corny Walput was mysterious. 
Winking and twisting his mouth, he bade his 
companions “Wait until the Foreman comes 
— wait until Snick comes. Then I’ll show 
you fireworks,” 

They did wait until the foreman came. But 
while they discussed their dinners (and most 
of haem brought their dinners with them) they 
did not forget to also discuss the pale-faced 
compositor in the shabby black coat. 

At length, about one o’clock, “Mr. Job 
rrottle” returned, and took his place quietly 
at his case, amid the winks, nods and whispers 
of the other compositors. The pugilistic youth 
was particularly happy in making ugly faces ; 
nature had done a great deal for him, but he 
assisted nature. 

Next entered Mr. Snick. Complacent with 
a good dinner, and twirling that bit of whisker,] 
under his chin, Mr. Snick resumed his place 
at the imposing stone. Corny approached — 
they exchanged whispers — Snick opened his 
eyes, and Corny pointed to the silent compos- 
itor. Then Snick grew red in the face, and 
pale again, whispering “ My goodness !” three 
times, in a voice of evident horror. Corny 
resumed his whispers, and ihen Snick hurried 
down stairs, and had a little private talk with 
the Proprietor, When Snick came back, his 
face was glowing with excitement; he stepped 
over the floor witn the consciousness that all 
eyes were fixed upon him. lie twirled that 
fragmentary whisker with almost a savage air. 
The compositors, boys and men, ceased their 
labors — all save the silent one, who, with 
downcast head, worked away in his corner. 

“ i2h — ah — ehem !” and Snick tapped tke 
silent compositor on the shoulder — u Mr, 
Trottle 1 I think you said your name was 
Trottle?’ 

The silent compositor had been setting upon 
an article for the “ Gospel Christian,” entitled 
“ The Gospel nature of the Gallows.” He 
turned, as Mr. Snick spoke, and looked at 
him, like a man who has been disturbed in the 
midst of a reverie. His projecting brow, pale 
cheeks, and eves deep sunken, were hall in 

light and half in shadow. 


“ What did you say. Sir?” he said in a low 
voice, and with the manner of an absent man. 

“ I think that you said your name was Job 
Trottle?” said Mr. Snick, very slowly. 

“ I did, and so it is,” and the silent compos- 
itor turned to his task again. 

O 

Mr. Snick seemed for a moment confounded 
by the quiet manner of the individual. Gather- 
ing courage, (and with Corny at his back, at- 
tended by one boy and two men) he again 
tapped “ Mr. Job Trottle” on the arm 

“ No, Sir,” he said, in a voice between a 
bluster and a whine — “ No, Sir. Your name 
aint Job Trottle, but it is Elijah Watson. Do 
you hear that, Sir, Elijah Watso'n?” 

The silent compositor started, as though a 
sharp pain had smote him in the heart. His 
face grew red as blood. He surveyed Mr. 
Snick, while his eyes seemed at once to sink 
deeper in their sockets, and flash up with a 
sinister glare. 

“Yes,” continued Snick, gathering courage 
from the compositors, who, man and boy, had 
ranged themselves at his back (the pugilistic 
youth making frightful faces all the while;) 
“ Yes, your name is Elijah Watson, and you 
haven’t come from Washington, but you have 
come from the Eastern Penitentiary, where 
you’ve been spendin’ four years for 'passing 
counterfeit money. Now, what do you think 
of your brass, to come and pass yourself off 
as an honest man ? In this here office, too, 
where nothing but moral, well-behaved people 
are tolerated why — ” 

Snick paused for breath, and the silent com- 
positor stood with one arm resting on his case, 
while he took a hurried glance at the group 
before him. His face flushed, and was pale 
again; there was a straining at the muscles of 
his throat, and then lie turned his face toward 
the window. What was passing in his heart 
God only knows. 

Snick, taking this for a sign of cowardice, 
resumed his elegant strain — ■ 

“To come here, in the office of the Gospel 
Christian (not mentioning any quantity of tracts 
and books which are published under this roof ) 
and pass yourself off as an honest man ! Why, 

I never heard of — ” 

“Hqw did type settin’ go out yonder • ” in- 
terrupted the pugilistic youth. 

“ Eayther confinin' — aint it?” remarked 



■ 



Corny — “ has a depressin’ influence on the 

sperrits, I’m told?” 1 ; 

The convict turned, and cast lus eye toward 

the nail where his coat was hanging. He was 
deathly pale ; the muscles of his face were 
knit ; he shook from head to toot. 

“ Let me pass you, if you please,” he said 
in a very low voice — the tone o a man who 
is endeavoring to choke down some violent 
burst of passion. ,fT 9 i v 7 

Mr. Snick didn’t like tlie expression of his 
deep sunken eye, so he let him pass. And the 
compositors gave way, Corny slinking in the 
background, while the pugilistic youth, in the 
extreme van, kept up his pantomime of fright- 
ful faces. 

The convict did not speak, but turning his 
back upon them all, walked quietly across the 
floor, and put on his coai;, and drew his cap 
over his brows. Then, still keeping his face 
toward the wall, he walked across the floor 
and descended the stairway, drawing his cap 
deeply over his brows, as he disappeared from 
view. . - i> * 

This silence — this struggling of the poor 
wretch with his emotion — this exit made with- 
out a word, and without even asking for the 
money which was due him — was not without 
its effect upon foreman and compositors. 

44 Come back,” cried Snick, running to the 
head of the stairs — 44 1 owe you two dollars 
?,nd a half — ” 

But the convict was gone beyond the reach 
of Ids voice. One of the compositors, not 
quite so virtuous as the rest (though he had ta- 
citly assented to the moral of this scene) 
whispered to Snick — received two dollars and 
a hall in silver — and, without hat or coat, 
rapidly descended the stairway. He passed 
through press-room, bindery and ware-room, 
in his eager search after the convict; and his 
search being fruitless, he descended the long 
dark stairway which led to the street. 

Up and down the street he looked, and to 
the right and left, but the convict had disap- 
peared. : — w oai — ‘ 

“ Well,” ejaculated the compositor, as he 
stood clinking the half dollars in his hands — 

O 

u The face of that fellow has left quite an i*m- 
pression on me. I think it would been just as 
well if Corny had kept his tongue, and Snick 
had minded his own business, ’ } * 


And so it would. 

We shall see the 44 silent composite! ” again. 

k \ " i PART X. 

THE SUPERNUMERARY. 

In the month of October, 1849, a young 
woman, who was connected with one ot the 
theatres in a subordinate capacity, excited con- 
siderable attention on the part of those gentle- 
men who prowl about the stage, seeking 
44 whom they may devour.” We alludj to 

that class of characters, young and old, who 
insult respectable .women in the street, pafado 
opera glasses in the pit, while the dancing is 
in progress, and hang around the green room, 
where the actors congregate when their presence 
is not needed upon the stage. 

This young woman was altogether a subor- 
dinate ; she did not appear in any leading 
character, but was seen as an assistant in tire 
ballet, or as a part of some dramatic spectacle; 
in fact she was what is generally denominated 
a 44 supernumerary.” She was about eighteen 
years of age ; rather tall ; with brown hair, 
dark eyes, a noble bust, and a walk that would 
not have disgraced an empress. She was new 
to the stage. Who or what she was, no one 

o 

knew; not even the manager who paid her 
thirty-seven and a half cents per night for her 
services in the ballet and spectacle. She had 
only been engaged a week, in October, 1849, 
when her beauty made a considerable buz 
among the libertines of tlie pit, and the loung- 
ers of the green room. Her modest manner, 
and her evident desire to remain unobserved 
and unknown, only whetted the curiosity of* 
these vultures, who prey upon female innocence 
and beauty. 

One night, however, as winding her faded 
shawl about her shoulders, and drawing her 
green veil over her face, she left the theatre, on 
her way to her unknown home, she was fol- 
lowed — at a discreet distance — by pne of 
those gentlemen of the character named above. 
He was rather portly; wore a hangup which 
concealed the lower part of his face, anv car- 
ried a large bone-headed stick. The object of 

his pursuit led him a devious chase. Up one 
street and down another, now passing through 
narrow alleys, and now along the streets, she 
hurried on, until at last she reached a small 





26 


frame house, which stood at the extremity of 
a dark court, in that district somewhat widely 
known as “ Moyamensing.” This court is 
known in the language of the District by the 
euphonious name of “ Dog Alley.” A lamp 
standing at the entrance 01 the Court emitted 
a fain and dismal light. W hen she reached 
the lamp she paused, and looked around her, 
a thougu she was conscious or afraid that she 
had been followed. The gentleman with the 
big stick saw her turn, and sjkuiked behind a 
convenient corner, in time to avoid her obser- 
vation, In a moment she resumed her way 
and entered the frame tenement, from the win- 
dow of which a faint light shone out upon the 
pavement. , 

The partly gentleman stole cautiously to the 
window, took one glance, and then crouched 
against the door of the house. That glance, 

however, had revealed to him a small room 

♦ 

miserably furnished, with an old woman sitting 
near a smouldering fire, and a young one — 
the “ supernumerary” of the theatre — stand- 
ing by her side, one hand laid upon a pine ta- 
ble, and the other raised as if in the act of 
expostulation. 

The portly gentleman did his best to over- 
hear the conversation which took place between 
tlie two. Pressing his ear against the chink 
of the door, and balancing himself with his 
stick, as he kneeled on one knee, he managed 
to hear a portion of their conversation. 

“ So you’ve come — have you?” said the 
old woman, in a voice between a grunt and a 
growl. 

“ Yes, mother. And there's my week’s 

salary — just three dollars.” 

« Three dollars! And how’s a body as is 
old and has the rheumatiz to live on three dol- 
lars ?” # * r 

« Mother I do all that I can, I’m sure. I’d 

earn more if I could.” 

, it Bah! If you only know’d what’s what 

you might earn a heap, 1 tell you* Here since 
voir fathers been dead— killed by fall i m 
off a buildup four years ago — I’ve had all the 
keer of you and tuk in washin’ when you was 
go in* to school. Yes, I tuk you from tbe Fac- 
tory and sent you to school. And now when 
you’ve grow’d up and kin do somethin’ for 

your mother, why don’t you do it/” 


44 What can I do, mother?” said the young 
woman, in a voice of entreaty. 

V 

The old woman replied with a sound be- 
tween a cough and a laugh, as she said : 

44 What kin you do ? Why if I was young 
and handsom’ and had a foot and a face like 
yourn — and danced at the theater, I’d show 
you, what I could do. Aini there plenty of 
rich gentlemen, as ’ud be glad to pay you 
your weight in goold if — 

The rest of the sentence was lost in a 
whisper, but the gentleman in the big stick, 
who listened at the door, heard the reply of 
the girl, which consisted in a simple ejacula- 
tion. uttered in a tone of reproach and shame — 

44 Mv God, Mother!” o 

44 Yes, it is easy to say My God, Mother!” 
replied the old woman mimicking her daughter, 
“But if you only had the spunk of a lobster 
you might roll in goold an’ be a great actress 
and — what not !” 

The listener did not wait for another word, 
but pushing open the door, entered the apart- 
ment. I lie old woman looked up in surprise, 
her haggard face looking almost ghastly, by 
lamplight, while the daughter (who had thrown 
her bonnet and shawl aside) gazed upon the 
intruder ia evident alarm. 

44 Don't mind me, my good friends, don’t 
mind me,” said the portly gentleman, in a 
thick voice, as he approached the table. “ I’m 
a friend, that’s all. Have see.n your daughter 
oil the stage, ant! would like to make a great 
actress of her. Am a theatrical manager — 
just over the water — in search of American 
talent. Will take charge of her tuition. That 
can’t be managed without money, but money’s 
no object to me.” 

And stepping between the mother and 
daughter he laid five bright gold pieces upon 
the pine table. 

“Here’s luck 5” screeched the old woman, 
grasping for the money. 

44 What say y r *>u ?” asked the portly gentle- 
man, addressing the daughter. 

“I — don’t — know — you — sir — ” she 
exclaimed with a proud curl of the lip, as her 
bosom swelled under its shabby covering. At 
the same time she wrenched the money from 
her mother’s grasp, 44 Take your money 





27 


There was something queenly in the look 
of the vounff woman, as, with her form swell- 

* " m t * l 1 

ing to its full stature, she regarded the intruder 
with a look of withering scorn, extending his 
gold pieces in one hand and at the same time 
pointing to the door. 

“ The very thing! That voice would do 
honor to Fanny Kemble! 1 ell you, Miss, 
that nature cut you out lor an actress — a great 

actress.” 

“So natur’ did,” exclaimed the old woman, 
rising from the chair — “Take the money, gal, 
and let this gentleman make a great actress of 

you.” i 1 f il 1 1 ' 

“ Either you must leave this house, or I 

will,” said the girl, and dashing the gold pieces 
into the face of the portly gentleman, she re- 
treated behind the table, her eye flashing and 

b 

her bosom swelling with anger. This action 
rather disconcerted the gentleman; Retreating 
backward, and bowing at the same time, he 
stumbled over the threshold, and gathered him- 
self up in time to receive the gold pieces from 
the Hand of the girl. She had gathered them 
from the floor in defiance of the objurgations ot 
her mother, who earnestly sought to retain only 
* a single piece. 

“N ow, mother,” said the girl, closing the 
door and placing her hand (irmly on the old 
woman’s shoulder, “ If after this I hear one 
word from your lips, like those you have spo- 
ken to-night, we part forever.” 

Her flashing eye and deep toned voice im- 
pressed the old woman with a sensation be- 
tween rage and fear. But ere she could frame 

o i 

a reply, her daughter had gone up stairs, and 
the old woman heard a sound like the closing 

of a bolt. 

* “One of her tantrums. When things don’t 
go right, she goes to bed without supper, and 
locks herself in. Lor’ how they brings up 

children now-h-days ! ” 

For a long time she sat in silence, stretching 
her withered hands over the fire: at length she 
took the light, and hobbling to the door, un- 
locked it, and went out into the court. Bend- 
i no* down, the light extended in her skinny 

O 1 ” ^ t i * 

fingers and playing over her haggard face, she 
groped in the mud and filth for the gold pieces 
which her daughter had flung in the face of 
die portly gentleman# 

“ Won,” she mumbled, seizing a bright ob- 


ject which sparkled in toe mud, when a hand 
touched her lightly on the arm, and looking up 
she saw the portly gentleman at her side. 

He pointed to the door of the frame house, 
and led the way. She followed, and after clo- 
sing the street door and the door which opened 
on the stairway, they sat down together and 
conversed for a long time in whispers, the old 
woman’s face manifesting a feverish lust for 
gain, while the portly gentleman removed his 
hat and suffered his coat collar to fall on his 
shoulders, until his ace was visible. 

It was the face of a very pleasant looking 

£ 

gentleman, whose forehead was relieved by 
masses of curling black hair, and beneath whose 
ample chin appeared a half circle of whiskeis 
— glossy whiskers, well oiled and curled 
and shown in contrast with a white shirt bo- 
som, which sparkled with a diamond pm. 
This gentleman, without the hair and whiskers, 
would have been at least fifty-four years old — ■ 
but with hair and whiskers (both were false) 
he looked only forty-two. 

There was a bright twinkle in his eye, half 
hidden in wrinkled lids, and a sort of amorous 
grin upon his lips. He approached the old 
woman and talked in a low oily voice. 

They conversed for a long time and the end 
oi the conversation was in these words : — 

“To-morrow night, as she is going to the 
theatre,” said the gentleman. 

“ It is election night and the streets will be 
full of bonfires and devilment. She can be 
seized at the corner of the street, put in a cab 
which I have ready, and kept quiet until her 
temper is a little managable.” 

He laid some bank notes and bright gold 
pieces upon the table, which the old woman 
seized with a hungry grasp, as she replied : 

“ Yes, and Black Andy is the man to do it* 
Have everything ready and it kin be done. 
You’d better see Andy ; he keeps a groggery 
at the corner of the court.” 

“ The Gentleman” rose, and biddinor the 
dame good night, proceeded to the “ Hotel’ 
o a huge negro, who went by the name ol 
Black Andy, or the “ Bulgine,” in the more 
familiar dialect of Moyamensing. Picking hi* 
way through the darkness, he presently en- 
tered a low and narrow room, filled with stench 
and smoke, with negroes — men, women, and 
children huddled together in one corner, and 




28 


a bar in the other, behind which stood the ae- 

.4# 

gro himself, dealing out whiskey to a customer. 
The scene was lighted by three tallow candles, 
stuck in as many porter bottles. The 44 Bul- 
gine” was a huge, burly negro, black as the 
ace of spades, with a mouth like a gash, a nose 
that looked as if it had been trodden upon, and 
fists that might have felled an ox. The cus- 
tomer was a white man — rather tall and mus- 
cular — dressed in a miserable .suit of grey 
rags, with his hair worn long before the ears, 
and a greasy cloth cap drawn low over his 
forehead. 

44 This ’ere whiskey burns like rale 

grunted the customer, concluding his sentence 
wkh a blasphemous expression. 

44 Dat it does. It am de rale stripe — hot as 
pepper an’ brimstone.” 

Alter these words, 44 the Loafer” in grey 
rags stretched himself on the floor, and our 
worthy gentleman approached the negro. 

A few words sufficed to put the negro in 
possession of the object of the gentleman’s 
visit. He grinned horribly, as the worthy man 
bent over the counter, and communicated his 
desire in a confiding whisper. 

44 Bars my hand on it,” he said, 44 For a 
small matter o’ fifty dollars dis Bulgine put 
twenty gals in a cab.” 

44 To-morrow night — remember. The old 
lady’s agreeable and I’ll have the cab at the 
street corner. There’s twenty-five on ac- 
count.” 

44 Y-a-s sah, dat’s de talk,” responded the 

negro grasping the money. 

44 Who's that fellow V y whispered the Gen- 
tleman, touching with his foot the prostrate 
form of the the “Loafer,” who by this time was 
snoring lustily. 

“ Dat ■ — eh, dat ? I raly dono his name — 
but he’s a Killer.” 


PART XL 


TUE KILLERS. 


This seemed perfectly satisfactory to tin.* 
Gentleman, who drew his hat over his brows, 
pulled up the collar of his coat and leaving the 
groggery, made the best of his way homeward. 

After his visiter had gone, the En gine ap- 
proached the prostrate Loafer, and kicked him 

with his splay foot. ... 


44 Get out o’ dis. Dis ’ain’t no place for you 
dam white trash.” 

; The loafer arose grumbling, and lounged la- 
zily to the *door, which the Black Bulgine 
closed after him, with the objurgation — 44 De 
darn Killer ; dar room is better as dar com- 
pany. ” ’ 

No sooner, however, had the Loafer passed 
from the groggery into the court, than *his lazy 
walk changed into a brisk stride, his head rose 

O 

on his shoulders, and he seemed to Jiaye be- 
come in a moment altogether a new man. 

! He passed from the court into the street, 
where a couple of ruffian-like men stood be- 
neath the light of the street lamp. As he ap- 
proached them, he made a sign with his right 
hand, and the two ruffians followed him like 

dogs obeying the whistle of a master. Along 
the dark and deserted street the loafer pursued 
his way, until he came to the corner of a well- 
known street leading from ilie Delaware to the 

o 

Schuylkill ; a street which, by the bye, was 
lighted at every five yards by a groggery or a 
1 beer shop. At the corner, and near the door 
of every groggery, stood groups of men, or 
half-grown boys — sometimes five and some- 
times six or seven in a group. The Loafer 
passed them all, repeating the sign which he 
had given to the first two ruffians. And at the 
sign the men and half-grown boys fell in his 
1 wake ; by the time he had gone half a square, 

1 he was followed by at least twenty persons, 
who tracked his footsteps without a word. For 
a quarter of an hour they walked on, the si- 
lence only broken by the shuffling of their feet. 
At length arriving before an unfinished three- 
story brick house (unfinished on account of 
the numerous riots which have so long kept 
the District of Moyamensing in a panic) they 
silently ranged themselves around the 44 Loafer,” 
whose sign they had followed. 

“All Killers?” he said, anxiously scanning the 
visages of the ruffians, boys and men, who 
were only dimly perceptible by the star-light. 

44 All Killers, ” w^as the answer. 

The 44 Loafer” again made a sign with his 
right hand, which was answered by the others* 
and then exclaimed — 44 Come boys — we've 
work to do. Let us enter the Den of the 
Killers.” 

And one by one they descended into the cel- 
lar of the unfinished house — the ‘‘Loafer” 


0 




29 


heir? the last. Indeed he remained on the 

o 

ver^e of the cellar door, for a few moments af- 

o 1 

ter the others had disappeared. He looked 
anxiously np and down the street, and placing 
two fingers in his mouth, emitted a long and 
piercing whistle. It was answered in a mo- 
* meat, and from behind the corner of the build- 
ing came a person, whose slim form was muf- 
fled in the thick folds of a cloak* 

“ All right ?” said the new comer — and his 

O 

cloak falling aside for a moment, disclosed the 
glare of a uniform. 

“ All right,” answered the “Loafer” — “The 

o 7 

boys are ripe for fun. Let us go up after them. 
— What! You’re not afraid ?” he continued 
as the other displayed some signs of hesita- 
tion, • 

“Not afraid Dick, but — you’re sure of 
them?” whispered the man in the cloak. 

u I wish I was as sure of a safe landing in 
Cuba, one month hence. Come along, my 
boy ! “ The Killers and Cuba !” that’s the 

word. Come, and let me show you the Den of 
the Killers V 9 

lie grasped the hand of the stranger and 

they descended into the cellar* 

— — — 

PART XU. 

A YOUNG MAN WHO DESIRES TO KNOW “ TIIE 

NAME OF IIIS FATHER.” 

_ t 

Before we follow “the Loafer” and Lis uni- 
formed friend into “the Den of the Killers,” 
we will return to the house of the old woman, 
in the classic retreat of “ Dog Alley.” No 
sooner had “ the gentleman” left her than she 
was surprised by the entrance of a new visitor. 
This is the way it happened. 

The old woman was once more alone, sit- 
ting beside the pine table, crumpling the notes 
between her fingers, while her lips moved in a 
half coherent soliloquy : 

“ Seems to me I’ve seen his face afore. I’ll 
bet punkins on it. If it was n’t for the whis- 
kers and the hair, I’d think — ” 

t 

“Good evening, Mother,” said a voice at 
her shoulder — “How d’ye get along, any- 
how ?” 

The speaker (who had entered unperceived 
while she was wrapt in her brown study) was 
a young man of not more than twenty-three 
years, in fact, although he looked nearly five 
years older. Dressed in a shabby black coat, 


buttoned to the neck, with an old cloth cap 
drawn over his forehead, he stood near the 
pine table, his right hand grasping a knotted 
stick. His voice was singularly hollow and 
husky in its every accent. The lamplight re- 
vealed his sunken cheeks, and deep-set eyes, 
as he stood there regarding the old woman with 

O O 

a half mocking grin. 

“ Oh, it’s you, is it ? said the old woman 
with a start — “A party time o’ night for you 
to show yourself! This blessed two weeks I 
haven’t c apped eyes on you — and for that 
matter, upon a penny o’ your money nayther.” 

“How should I get money, Mother?” said 
the young man, in a quiet tone, but as he spoke 
the grin widened over his colorless features. 

“Work!” and the old woman e utched her 
gold and notes, and put her hands under her 
shawl. 

“ Work 1 99 he echoed — “ Did n’t I try ? 
First at lire printih’ office, among printers, and 
you know what they did — don’t you ? Then 
as a porter at a shoemaker’s shop, among shoe- 
makers, and you know what they did — don’t 
you ? Then as a porter in a store, among por- 
ters and draymen, and you know what they 
did — don’t you? Can you tell me what 

name I went by at all these places ? ” 

He bent down, and drew closer to the old 

woman, his eyes flashing, while he shook with 
suppressed laughter. 

“ Did I go by the name of Job Trottle, 
or by the name of Elijah Watson, Convict 
' Number Fifty-One,’ in the Eastern Peni- 
tentiary ? ” 

“Kin I help it?” said the old woman, al- 
most savagely — “ Kin I help it ef you don’t 
get work a-cause you was in the State’s 
Prison?” 

Elijah did not at once reply. Throwing his 
cap upon the table, he disclosed his protuberant 
forehead, encircled by his dark hair, closely 
cut. He came a step nearer Mrs. Watson 
(for the reader doubtless recognizes our old 
friend of Runnel’s Court,) and folding his 
arms, looked at her steadily, as he said in a 
low voice — / 

“I don’t say you can help it, but I’ll tell 
you what you can help. \ r ou can help keep- 
in’ me in the dark about things I want to know, 
and things that I must know.” 

“What things? ” 



4 ‘ Don t sham stupid, old woman, for it won’t 
help you now, I want to know the name of 
a certain gentleman, who came to see you 
td t l 1 d beui a month in the Penitentiary, 
and who you suspfected was nobody else but 
my father. Don’t you remember you told me 
so, when you came to see me at Cherry Hill, 
soon afterwards ? Yes, you told me what a 
nice man he was — such a pleasant white cra- 
vat as he wore — and how you followed him 
from Runnel’s Court, and found out who he 
was. And bow, when you’d found out his 
name, you hunted up a certain old letter from 
Hi . mother, and found out that this identical 
gentleman was my father, and nothin’ else. 
You didn’t tell him tdat you had a letter rom 
my mother, or that you knew her name — you 
kept tha dark with me. Now, do you hear 
me ? Here 1 stand, and there you are, and 
you’ve got to tell me that old gentieman’s name, 
or I’ll know the reason why !” 

While Elijah was speaking, Mrs. Watson 
looked up, at first in wonder, and then with a 
sort of mingled fear and amazement. For 
violent passions were struggling upon the co- 
lorless features of the Convict ; his lips fairly 
writhed as he speke; and the veins stood out, 
Bwollen and purpled, upon his projecting brow. 

“Lije, don’t make a fool of yesself. Sit 
down, and cool yer dander. What’s the good 
o’ yer knowing the man’s name?” 

Elijah brought his stick upon the table, with 
a sound like the report of a pistol. 

“ That name, I say! ” he shouted, in a voice 
that was thick and husky with struggling pas- 
sions. “That name, afore you speak another 

word, or by I’ll go to -Cherry Hill for 

somethin’ worse than passin’ counterfeit money. 
Now, perhaps you understand me?” 

“ Lije, it won’t do you no good ; he’s dead,” 
cried Mrs. Watson, who trembled with fright. 

At these words the Convict fell back a step, 
while his face displaye the very distortion of 
mental torture in every writhing outline. 

“Dead! You aint lyin’?” he ejaculated. 

“ 3Ie was.drowned only a little while arter 
he came to see me in Runnel’s Court. It 
won’t do you no good to know his name. As 
for your mother, she died in Montreal last 
year. When she heard of the old man’s 
death, she sent me some money, and the next 
l heer’d was that she was dead.” 


“ And so you won’t tell me the name of my 
i ther?” said Elijah, bending across the table, 
atil his iace nearly touched the old woman’s 

shoulder. r ' a 

“It won’t do you no good, fur — ” 
lie reached forth his brawny hand, and 
clutched ! ter by the throat— “ Now,” lie whis- 
perer, as, half suffocated, she endeavored to 
tear his grip from her throat — “ Now, tell me 
his name, or I’ll choke you dead.” 

Gasping for breath, the old woman managed 
to murmur, “Take your hand from my throat, 
and I’ll tell.” Elijah at once released his 
grasp. “ No foolin,’ old woman, you must 

tel me the name an’ take your Bible oath upon 
it.” 

“ His name,” answered the old woman, 
“was John Tomson, and — ” 

“ Will you swear to that?” fiercely inter- 
rupted the Convict. “ Now, I know his name 
wasn’t John Tomson, for about three months 
arter I was in jail, the underkeeper told me 
of a gentleman who came and peeped at me 
through a hole in the wall. This gentleman 
was exactly like the one who visited you in 
Runnel’s Court- I know his name, and I jist 
want to see if you have truth enough in you 
to tell it to me. What was the name of my 
father? By the long days and nights I spent 

at Cherry Hill, I wont ask you that question 
again.” 

The old woman was now thorough y fright- 
ened . It was Iter first impulse to raise tike cry 
of murder, but when she looked at the face of 
the Convict — ferocious with a strange deter- 
mination — she abandoned this idea. 

“ The name o’ the old gentleman, who came 
to see me in Runnel’s Court, was Hicks — Ja- 
cob D. Z. Ilicks — an<; he was drowned about 
three months arterward. He was very riel], 
or folks said that he was, but his creditors ar- 
ter he was dead had to whistle for their money. 

An’ he’s the man I tuk to be your father 

s’ ’elp me God !” 

Lor r before she had concluded, the savage 
look of the Convict had been replaced by an 
expression o blank despair. 

“Jacob D. Z. Hicks!” the words came 
from his lips in an under tone — “That’s the 
the name. That’s the man who looked at me 
through the hole in the wall. And he’s dead, 
yes—” his voice rose into a shriek, as he 



SI 


* 


clutched his stick with both hands — “He’s 
where I can’t get at him.” 

Apparently overwhelmed by the violence of 
his emotions, he sank into a chair, and buried 
his face in his hands. The old "woman could 
hear him murmur, in tones that were alternately 
deep with rage, or tremulous with almost un- 
manly feeling— 

“ I 1 hat’s the name. That’s it. And he 
locket at me through the hole in the jail, and 
did not stir a hand for me. And he knew 
that I had been put in, for passing a counter- 
feit note on his own bank*— and knew* that I 
was his son. He did. And now when I 
come out o’ jail, the word “ Convict” Toilers 
me everywhere, and shuts me out from every 

hope of ever gettin’ an honest livelihood — 

* 

yes, Langfeldt, who was hung last fall, was 
better off than I am ! I think I’d go ten years 
in the Penitentiary jist for the chance o’ havin’ 
five minutes talk with this father of mine!” 


and haunt you, though I’m dead as dead can 
be. Good night, old woman.’* 

He moved to the door — 

Where are you goin’, Lije ?” 

“ To complete my education ,” he said, turn 
ing his head over his shoulder, with a broad 
grin upon his colorless face — “ You see, when 
I was out at Cherry Ilill, they brought me a 
Bible, and set me to readin’ and thinkin’— 
they did. They spoke sich smooth words to 
me, while they were buryin’ me alive in that 
stone coffin. They did. And now I’m goin’ 
to complete' the education which they begun. 
Good night, old woman.” 

With these words he left the hovel, and as 
the door closed on him, the o d woman, still 
41 crumpling” the bank notes in her fingers, 
muttered to herself — 

“ Where have I seen that gentleman afore ! 

I think I know him spite of his black hair and 
whiskers ?” 


i 


“ What hid you do with him, Lije?” 

“Talk WLth him”— he raised his face ; there 
were tears in his fiery eyes — “ Talk with him, 
that’s all.” 

For a little while they sat in silence ; the 
old woman “huddled up” hi her shawl, and 
Elijah with his face buried in his hands. At 
length he rose, put on his cap, anil approached 
tne pine table — 

“Where’s Kate?” he said — “I have not 

% 

seen her these two weeks.” 

“ Up stairs — asleep,” was the answer. 

“ Now look here, I’m a goin’ to do some- 
thin’ that will set me up for life, or — never 
mind what . I know your disposition, and 
know you’d make no more bones of sell in’ 
Kate o the devil, than you would of eatin’ 
your breakfast. If I succeed in what I’m 
goin’ to undertake, Kate will hear from me. 
Tell her that, and she will receive from me, 
what will put her out of want for life. For 
th ugh she aint my sister by blood, she is my 
sister in fact; we’ve been brought up together, 
and I think more of her than a dozen sisters 
by blood. I I fail, old woman, why you’ll 
never hear of me again. In that case I’ll be 

a dead man, or a i Number’ in some jail or 



other. But don’t you put any of your devil’s 
tricks to work about Kate — if you ever bring 
harm to her, by the living — , ]’ll come back 


She did not allude to Elijah, but }o the gen- 
tleman with whom she had contracted the ruin 
i oor Kate. She sat there alone, until tho 
lamp flickered its last, and then crawled up 
stairs to ti e miserable bed, first stopping a mo- 
ment to listen at the door of her daughter’s 
room. All was quiet there. Poor Kate, whom 



Manager,” otherwise known a? the “ Gentle- 
man,” was sleeping the sound sleep of inno« 
cence and toil. 

* 

VrGinr b PART XIII. 

THE DEN OF TIIE KILLERS. 

■ 

1 Nov/ we return to the Loafer and his friend 
in uniform, whom we left lor a short time in 
part XI. 

, The Loafer jumped into the cellar of tha 
| unfinished house, and was followed by his 
friend, whose slim figure and bright uniform 
was hidden in his cloak. Scrambling in si- 
lence through the dark cellar, they ascended 
in the darkness into the upper rooms of tha 
unfinished house, the Loafer leading his friend 
by the hand. Arriving at the head of the 
second flight ol stairs, where a faint light came 
through a window, the Loafer said : 

I “ Wait here a minute, Captain. I’ll go in 

* a 

and see the boys. Do you hear ’em ?” 

“ Hear them?” said the Captain, with some- 



32 


tiling of a foreign accent — “ Do you think Pm 
deaf ?” 

He did indeed hear them, for a clamor like 
Babel resounded from a room which was di- 
vided from the entry on the third floor by a 
partition of lath and plaster. Shrouding him- 
self in his cloak, the Captain leaned against 
the wall, and looked out of the window, while 
the Loafer entered the room from whieh the 
clamor proceeded. 

It was somewhat gorgeously lighted — the 
candles being of tallow, and porter bottles 
serving for candlesticks. The walls-, although 

J O 

but newly plastered, were black with smoke, 
nnd ornamented with the heraldic devices of 
the Killers, such as 

“ THE IvILLLERS FOR EVER !” 

Or again, in a more lively vein, 

“ GO IT KILLERS !” 

- 

Or yet once more 

“ DOWN WITH THE BOUNCERS !” 

(The Bouncers, be it understood, are a rival 
gang of desperadoes.) The room was desti- 
tute of chairs or tables; indeed it was without 
furniture of any kind. The porter bottles 
containing t ie candles were arranged at various 
distances from each other — in a sort of an 
oblong circle — along the uncarpeted floor. 

Around each candle, seated on the floor, was 
a group of men and boys, who were drinking 
bad whiskey — fingering dirty cards — smok- 
ing pestilential segars — and swearing vigor- 
ously in the' intervals of whiskey, cards, and 
cigars. These were the Killers, and this was 
the Den of the Killers. 

And into this foul den entered the Loafer in 
his grey rags. He was hailed by a “ Hurrah 
for Rob Blazes, t fie Captain of the Killers !” 
He answered the shout in as hearty a manner, 
and then flinging a couple of dollars on the 
floor, added, “ Some more rum, boys! We 
may as well make a night of it.” 

Then looking beneath the front of his cap, 
he silently surveyed “ the Killers.” It was a 
fine spectacle. They were divided into three 
classes — beardless apprentice boys who, after 
a hard day’s work, had been turned loose upon 
the street, at night, by their Masters or 
11 Bosses” — young men of nineteen and twenty 
who, fond of excitement, had assumed their 
name and joined the gang for the mere fun of I 


j die thing, and who would either fight for a 
man or knock him down, just to keep their 
hand in — and fellows with countenances that 
reminded* you of a brute and devil, well inter- 
mingled. These last were the smallest in the 
number, but the most ferocious of the three. 
These, ihe third class, not more than ten in 
number, were the very worst specimens of the 
■savage of this large city. Brawny fellows, 
with faces embruted by hardship, rum, and 
crime, they were “just the boys” to sack a 
theatre or bum a church. 

It was to these that Bob Blazes, the Leader 
of the Killers, addressed himself. 

“ Come, lieutenants, let’s go into the next 
room. While the boys have their fun here, 
we’ll cut out some fun for to-morrow. To- 
morrow’s ’lection day.” 

The eleven radians rose at his bidding and 

O 7 

followed him into the next room, the foremost 
carrying a porter bottle in his hand. 

This room was larger than the first, and 
along the windows which opened upon the 
street, rough pieces of pine board were nailed. 
Rougher pieces of old carpet were huddled in 
the corners — these were the beds of the 
“ lieutenants” in which they slept away the 
day, after a night of rum and riot — and the 
mantelpiece was adorned with broken pipes 
and empty bottles. The walls were quite pic- 
torial, being plastered over with theatre bills, 
on which the names o “Jakey,” “ Mose,” 
and “Lize” appeared in conspicuous letters; 
thus hinting at the fact in city life, that the 
pit of the theatre sometimes educates Killers, 
even as the box of the theatre very often pro- 
duces full fledged puppies, who carry hair on 
their upper lips and opera-glasses in their 
hands. 

Taking his position in the centre of the 
room, with the eleven ruffians around him, 
Bob Blazes surveyed their hang-dog faces in 
silence for a few moments, and then began : 

“In a week, my boys, we’ll start for Cuba. 

1 Cuba, gold, and Spanish women,’ that’s our 
motto ! You know that I’m in communica- 
tion with some of the heads o the Expedi- 
tion ; I was told to pick out the most despe- 
rate devils I could find in Moyamcnsin’. I’ve 
done so. You’ve signed your names, and re- 
ceived your first month’s pay. In a week 
you’ll go on to New York with me. and tlun 

¥ O 




# 



33 


hurra?* for 4 Cuba, gold, and Spanish wo- 
men !* ” !i 

“ Hurrah for ‘ Cuba, gold, and Spanish wo- 
men !* ” * * ‘ K ‘ I 

Bob Blazes raised his cap, and displayed a 
sunburnt face, encircled by sandy whiskers, 
and with the scar of a frightful wound under 
the left eye. There was sPfcind of ferocious 
beauty about that countenance. It was the face 
of a man of twenty-three, who has seen and 
suffered much, and known life on land and sea, 
in brothel and bar-room, and, perhaps, in the 
— Jail. 

“ Wait a minute, boys, and I’ll show you 
something,” said Bob, and, without another 
word, hurried from the room. In a moment 
he returned, holding a cloaked figure by the 
hand, much to the surprise and wonder of the 
Killers. 

“This is your Captain. Captarn Jack 
Jones, allow me to make you acquainted with 
the very cream of the Killers. Three cheers, 
my boys, for Jack Jones !” 

And while the cheers shook the room, the 
stranger removed his hat — disclosing a dark 

^ O 

complexioned and whiskered face — and flung 
his cloak upon his right arm — thus revealing 
a very handsome blue and gold uniform, which 
fitted h is slender iorm, like a glove to a wo- 
man's hand. Jack Jones bowed and laid his 
hand upon iris heart, and said, in good English, 
spiced with a Spanish accent' — 

“ Gentlemen, I’m exceedingly proud to meet 
you.” As lie said this, his dark eyes twinkled 
under the dark brows, and lie gave a twist to 
his jet black mustache. “ I have a trifle here, 
in the way of coin, which Fd like to see ex- 
pended on our outfit — ” He scattered some 
gold pieces on the floor with the air of a the- 
atrical King giving away theatrical money — 
“ And our friend, Bob Blazes, here, will ex- 
plain the rest.” 

With these words he resumed his hat ami 
cloak and stepped to the door, while the Kil- 
lers — all save one — were scrambling for the 

o 

money. When they had accomplished this 
• feat, they looked around for Captain Jack 
Jones, but he was gone. 

“Never mind him,” cried Bob Blazes — 

*• lie's got important business to attend to, to- 
night, and can't be with us. Bring 1 out the 

Qj 

whiskey, and let's have a talk.” 


The whiskey was brought ; and all the 
Killers participated therein, save the one who 
was stretched in the corner on a pile of old 
carpets. 

“ To-morrow night is election night, and we 

© © 7 

may as well make a raise before we go.” 
Thus spoke Bob Blazes, and his sentiments 
were greeted with a chorus of oaths. 

“ To make a long story short, boys, to-mor- 
row night, a rich nabob of Walnut street, who 
has failed for $200,000, and who carries a 
great part of his money about him — for fear 
of his creditors, who could lay hold of houses 
or lands if lie owned either — to-morrow 
night, this nabob comes down to the groggery, 
in Dog Alley, kept by the big nigger — ” 

“ The Bulgine ! D n him,” said ten 

voices in a breath. 

“ He's coming there on some dirty work. 
Now I move that we set a portion of our gang 
to raise the devil among the niggers of Marv 

o D © n 

street, while we watch for the nabob, and get 
hold of him, and bring him to our den.” 

T h is sentiment met with an unanimous re- 
sponse. Placing the candle on the floor, Bob 
squatted beside it, and motioned to the others 
to follow Iris example. Presently a circle of 
“ gallows” faces surrounded the light, with the 
sunburnt and scarred visage of Bob Blazes in 
the centre. 

As for the solitary Killer, he still reclined 
on his couch of old carpets — apparently over- 
come with rum or sleep. 

“ lie carries some two or three thousand 
dollars about him,” said Bob. “ His name is 
— never mind his name. Now follow my di- 
rections. You, Bill, will take care and get a 
police officer or two to help our gang to raise 
a muss among the niggers. You, Jake, will 
head half of the boys, and first raise an alarm 
of fire. You, Tom, will come with me, and 
hang around the groggery in Dog Alley, to- 
morrow night, after dark. And as for you, 
Sam, you'd better see Hickory Parchment, the 
Politician, and get him to wink at our little 
muss — -that is if we do raise a muss. Now 
let’s understand one another — ” 

And while he laid down before this Senate 
of the Killers, his plan of operations for the 
Mexican Campaign of the ensuing night, the 
shouts of the banqueting Killers, in the next 
room, came through the partition, like the yells 



34 


A 


of so many Congressmen engaged in gelling 
lip a fight on the last day of the session. 

At length the matter was clearly understood. 
Deep in whiskey, the ten Killers shouted hur- 
rah! at every other word* of their leader, while 
the eleventh lay upon his bed of old carpets in 
one corner. His evident inattention to the 
Ihi - irif'S in contemplation at length arouse'! 
the curiosity of Bob Blazes, the Leader. 

a ho that snoring \ here in the corner,” lie 
asked. 

“It’s only Lije — Lije Watson, who’s just 
got out o’ the Peril tenshery,” answered one of 
the eleven — “ He was in for passin’ counter- 
feit money — you know, I told you all about 
it the ot her cay. He’s a little drunk, I guess,” 

“ Not so drunk as you think,” answered that 
peculiarly husky voice, which we have heard 
before, “ 4 Not drunk, only reflectin’,’ as Judge 
Tomahawk said when the Temperance Society 
waited on him, to thank him for his temper- 
ance speeches and bund him drunk.” 

And as he said this, Elijah arose from his 
pile of carpets, and squatted down in the midst 
of the Killers, directly opposite their Leader. 

“Drink somethin’, Lije,” cried one — 
“ You’re pale as thunder.” \ 

“What makes your eyes look so queer?” 
paid another. “ Got a touch o’ the man with 
the poker ?” 

Elijah was indeed frightfully pale. His 
eyes sunk deep in their sockets, had a wild and 
glassy look. With his hands laid on his knees, 
he turned his gaze from face to face, until it 
rested upon the scarred and sunburnt ‘visage of 
Bob Blazes, the Leader. 

“I’ve heard your story about this nabob, /as 
you call him, and now I’d like to ask you a 
question or two,” said Elijah. 

“ Fire away,” responded the Leader. 

“ Did this nabob once live in Walnut street 
pear street ?” 

“He did,” answered Bob. 

“ Did he disappear four years ago, and was 
his hat found on the wharf?” ' 

“ You’re too hard for me ’Lije,” was the 
answer of the Leader, “ I can’t answer that. 1 
Take a little whiskey, and get some color in 
your face. You look like a subject on a dis- 
secting table.” 

o 

“ Was his name Jacob D. Z. Hicks?” said 
Elijah fixing his eyes earnestly upon die | 


i Leader, and grasping him rather roughly by 
the arm. ~ * * 

Bob Blazes dropped the bottle on the floor. 
He started up and shobk the hand of the Dis- 
charged Convict from his arm, exclaiming — 
“ Why ’Lije lias the manny poker sure enough. 
Thunder ! What puts such ideas into his 
head? What the devil do I know of your 
Zebediah Hicks ?” 

■ 

With these words he resumed his seat, in 
the midst of the band, who assailed Elijah 
with a burst of laughter, mingled with curses. 

“Drink somethin’ ’Lije, and drive away the 
horrors,” was the end of their chorus. 

Nothing daunted, ’Lije turned his corpse- 
like face to the light, and regarding “ Bob 

Blazes” with the same fixed stare, said 
siowly — 

“ Come captain, you need’nt shove me off 
in that way. It rayther sharpens a man’s 
senses to spend four years in Cherry Hill, ai d 
Vm jist possessed by the idea — I don’t know 
why, and I don’t keer why — that your rich 
nabob is nobody else than Hicks the Merchant, 
who disappeared four years ago. Now, you 
know me boys, (surveying the other Killers) 
and you know that when my blood’s up, I am 
always that . I am. So if you want me to 
go into your muss, with the right sperrit, to- 
morrow night, Bob must answer my question. 
Yes or no ! Is your nabob named Jacob D. 
Z. Hicks ?” 

“ Why do you ask V 9 said Bob, rather cowed 
— at least surprised — by the earnest manner 
of the Convict — “ What have you got to do 
with this Hicks V 9 

“Nothin’ much. Only I was put to jail 
for passin’ a note on one ofbis Banks, which 
note happened to be counterfeit. That’s all.” 

“ Well,” said Bob, drawing a long puff from 
a cigar, which he had lighted at the candle — 
“If it’s any satisfaction to you to know it, I 
am induced io believe, that this nabob was 
once named Jacob D. Z. Hicks ” 

A flush of red, shot into the cheeks of the 
Convict. He said nothing, but quietly reached 
for the bottle, and took a long and hearty 
draught. After a pause, he said in a careless 

way to Bob Blazes — 

“Come Blazes, you’ve seen somethin’ of 
life and so have I. Suppose we tell somethin’ 
of our lives to the boys. You begin.” 

























35 


Thus addressed, Blazes stretched himself 
leisurely along the door, and- punctuating his 


narrative, with draughts of whiskey and 
pufts of cigar smoke, told the boys some of 

His story, inter- 


the events of his history. 


1849. On that night the city and districts of 
Philadelphia were alive with excitement. 
Every street had its bonfire ; crowds of voters 
were collected around every poll ; bar-room 
and groggery overflowed with drunken men. 


spersed with oaths and slang, still gave some The city and the districts were astir. And 
traces in its language ol a good collegiate cdu- through the darkness of night, a murmur rose 
cation. at intervals like the tramp of an immense 

It was a stirring narrative. It spoke much army. 


of life in Havana — of life on 



coast of 


It was election night. 


The good citizens 


Africa 


of slave ships stored thick and foul I were engaged in making a Sheriff who might 

and of the man- I prove an honest man and a faithful officer, or 


with their miserable cargo 

• o 


ner in which certain mercantile houses, in the who might heap up wealth, by stolen fees, and 
north, made hoards of money, even at the leave the county to riot and murder, while he 


present day, by means of the Slave Trade. 


grew rich upon the misery of the people. 


Even the Killers turned away in involuntary The good citizens were also engaged in elect- 


loathing, from the recital of the hellish exploits 
of this man, who only known to them for a 
few weeks, by the name of “Bob Blazes” had 
doubtless borne a different and more significant 
name, in Havana and on the coast of Africa. 

After he had done, Elijah commenced 

II is was a different story. How, for four 
years, he had sat in his cell, night and day, 
day and night, counting every throb of his 
heart, and wondering whether he should ever 
put his foot on free ground again. There was 
something like eloquence in the manner of the 
Convict. His pale face lighted up, and his 
eyes shone, arid his hands moved in rapid ges- 
ticulation — he was telling to these Outcasts, 
tlie story of his wretched Life — a brief hut 
harrowing story, commencing with the life of 
an apprentice at the work bench, and ending 
with the life of a Convict in the Eastern Peni- 


tentiary. 

The Killers shuddered 


even Bob Blaze 




the hero of the Slave Ship felt the tears start 
to his eyelids. 

“And this Jacob D. Z. Hicks was the cause 
of my bein’ sent to Cherry Hill/’ — thus he 
concluded his recital — “and*so if your nabob 
turns out to be. Mister Jacob I). Z. I licks, 
don’t you think I’ve got an account to settle 
with him V y 

The Killers rather thought he had. And 
so did Bob* 


PARI' XIV. 

RIOT NEAR “THE CALIFORNIA HOUSE. 


1 7 


The night after these scenes in the Den of 


the Killers was election night 

3 


October 


ing Members of Assembly who might go to 
Harrisburg and do their duty like men, or who 
might go there as the especial hirelings of 
Bank speculators, paid to enact laws that give 
wealth. to one class, and poverty and drunken- 
ness to another. There was a stirring time 
around the State House : the entire vicinity 
ran over with patriotism and brandy. Vote 
for Moggs the People’s friend ! Vote for 
Hoggs the sterling patriot! Don’t forget 
Boggs the hero of Squamdog! Appeals like 
these glared from the placards on the walls, 
and flashed from the election lanterns, carried 
in the hands of sturdy politicians. In fine, 
all over the county, the boys had their bon- 
nes, the men their brandy and politics, the 
Candidates their agonies of suspense. 

There was one District, however, which 
added a new feature to the excitement of elec- 
tion night. It was that District, which partly 
comprised in the City Proper, and partly in 
in Moyamensing, swarms with hovels, courts, 
groggeries — with dens of every* grade o mis- 
ery and of drunkenness — festering there, thick 
and rank, as insects in a tainted cheese. It 
cannot be denied that hard-working and hon- 

o 

est people, reside in the Barbaiian District. 
Nor can it be denied that it is the miserable 
refuge of (lie largest portion of the Outcast 
population of Philadelphia county 

This District has for two years been the 
scene of perpetual outrage. Here, huddled m 
rooms thick with foul air, and drunk on poison 
that can be purchased for a penny a glass, you 
may see white and black, young and old, man 
and woman, cramped together in crowds that 





festev with wretchedness, disease and crime. 
This mass of misery and starvation affords a 
profitable harvest to a certain class of “hangers 
ontof the law” who skulk about the oflices of 
Alderman, trade in licenses and do the dirty 
work which prominent politicians do not care 
to do for themselves. 

Through this district, at an early hour on 
the night of election, a furniture car, filled 
with blazing tar barrels, was dragged by a num- 
ber ol men and boys, who yelled like demons, 
as they whirled their locomotive bonfire 
through the streets. It was first taken through 
a narrow street, known as St. Mary street, 'I 
and principally inhabited by negroes, and dis- 
tant about one square from the groggery of 
the “Bulgine” and the home of the young 
woman, mentioned in the previous pages. As 
the car whirled along a shot was fired ; a cry 
at once arose that a white man was killed, and 
the attention of the mob was directed to a 
house at the corner of Sixth and St. Mary, 
kept by a black fellow who (so the rumor ran) 
was married to a white woman. The mob 
gathered numbers every moment, and a con- 
flict ensued between the white mob and the 
negroes who had fortified themselves within 
the California House (a lour story building) 
and in the neighboring tenements and hovels, ! 
The inmates after a desperate contest were 

forced to ily ; the bar was destroyed, and the 
gas set on fire. In a moment the house was 
in a blaze and the red light flashing against the 
sky, was answered the State Mouse Bell* 
which summoned tne engine nose sun:-**. ! 
nies to the scene of action. Tne nope, qe 
Good Will, the Phoenix, the Vigilant and other 
engine companies arrived upon the scene — 
amid the clamor of the riot, while pistol shots 
broke incessantly on the air, and the flames of 
burning houses ascended to the heavens, light- 
ing with a red glare the faces of the mob — i 
and attempted to save the houses, which were 
yet untouched by the flames. Their efforts 
were fruitless. The mob took possession of 
the Franklin Cngine, and ran it up St. Mary 
street; as for the other companies, they were 
greeted at every turn by discharges of fire-arms, 
loaded with buckshot and slugs. Charles 
Himinelvvright, a fireman of the Good Will, 
was shot through the heart, while nobly en- 
gaged in the discharge of his duly. He was , 


a young and honest man. lie fell dead the 
moment he received the shot. Many were 
wounded, and many killed. It was an infer- 
nal scene. The faces of the mob reddened by 
the glare, the houses whirling in flames, the 
streets slippery with blood, and a roar like the 
yells of a tit ou sand tigers let loose upon their 
prey, all combined, gave the appearance of a 
sacked and ravaged town, to the District 
which spreads around Sixth and St. Mary 
street. The rioters and spectators in the 
streets were not the only sufferers. Men and 
women sheltered within their homes, were 
shot by the stray missiles of the cowardly 
combatants. 

While these scenes were in progress around 
the California House, all was quiet in Dog 
Aliev. Ti e hovels of the Court were closed 
or deserted ; the place looked as though it had 
not been occupied for a month. There were 
indeed two exceptions — a light- shone from 
the greasy windows of die groggery, kept by 
the Bulgine, and another emitted its struggling 

rays from the home of Mrs. Watson and her 
daughter Kate. 


PART XV. 

THE BULGINE AND KATE. 

Black Andy, alias, the Bulgine, was stand- 
ing at his door, with folded arms, the light 
from within playing over one side of his face 
when footsteps were heard from the farthet 
extremity of the Court, and a female figure 
was seen approaching through the gloom. It 
was the poor girl, Kate Watson, “the super- 
numerary,” on her way to the theatre. With 
her shawl thrown over her shoulders, and her 
veil drooping over her face, she came along 
with a hesitating step, pausing every moment 
as if to listen to the noise of the conflict which 
was progressing *at the distance of not more 
than two hundred yards. 

On she came ; the light from the groggery 
shone over her tall form ; she paused, when a 
hand was laid upon her mouth, and her arras 
were pinioned to her side, by an arm that en- 
circled her with a grasp ol iron. She strug- 
gled, as if for life, but the iron arm held her 

o • 7 

arms firmly against her sides. She attempted 
to scream, but in vain. Tossing back her head 
in her struggles, she beheld with a horror that 



37 


no words can paint, the black visage of the 
negro. 

Ft mav be as well to observe that the events 
of the night had in some measure changed the 
plan of “the Gentleman,” otherwise called 
“ the Manager,” and the negro. Instead of 
stationing the cab at the corner of the Court, 
they had place* [ it in a neighboring street, 
which communicated with the back door of 
the groggery, by means of a narrow alley. 
Therefore, Black Andy bore the struggling girl 
into his bar room, and from the bar room into 
a room on the second story, where waited the 
Gentleman, anxious to comfort his victim ere 
he had her conveyed to the cab. He designed 
to have her kept within this room until the 
mob would reach its heighth, when the addi- 
tional confusion would serve to render his pas- 
sage to a mansion in the heart of the city at 
once convenient and safe. The negro ascended 
the stairs, applied a bit of rag, wet witfi some 
pungent liquid, to the lips of the girl, and the 
. next moment tumbled her insensible form into 
the room, where the Gentleman waited for him. 

The liquid was chloroform. The Gentle- 
man had provided it for the fulfilment of his 
plans, and given it to the Bulgine. 

This accomplished, the negro descended, 
hurried along the alley to see that the cab stood 
Tere, in the street, according to the plan agreed 
upon. He then returned to his bar room, 
which lie had entirely cleared of its usual cus- 
tomers an hour before. Busying himself be- 
hind the bar, lie was surprised by the entrance 
of the “Loafer” in the grey rags, whom he 
had ejected the night previous. In his African 
dialect, lie bade the fellow quit his premises ; 
but the Loafer whined piteously for a glass of 

whiskey, which the Bulgine at last consented 
to give him. 

As he poured out the liquid poison, the 
Loafer leaned over the counter, one hand on a 
large earthen pitcher, supposed to contain water. 

“ Dar yer whiskey. Take it and trabel,” 
said the Bulgine, pushing the glass toward his 1 

st me.*. The Loafer raised his glass slowly 
to his lips, and at the same time kept one hand 
upon the handle of the pitcher, but instead of 
drinking the poison, he dashed it in the negro’s 
eves, at the same time hurling the pitcher, witli 
all the force of his arm, at his head. Blinded 
by the liquor, half stunned by the blow, the 


Bulgine uttered a frightful howl, and attempted 
to strike his antagonist across the bar. But a 
second blow, administered with a “ slung shot,” 
which the Loafer drew from his rags, took the 

negro on the forehead and laid him flat upon 
the floor. 

I he moment that he fell, the room was filled 
with “Killers,” who surrounded their Leader, 
known as the “Loafer” or Bob -.Blazes, with 
shouts and cries. They were eleven in num- 
ber, whom Bob had instructed the night be- 

O 

fore. Drunken, furious, and brutal, they were 
about to beat and mangle the prostrate negro, 
when Bob stopped them with a word : 

“ Look here, boys ! The devil’s delight is 
up in St. Mary street, and we must be busy 
while the fun lasts. Four of you go to the 
enl of the alley, and take care of the cab; 
two of you guard the front door, and let the 
rest remain outside, on the watch, while I go 
up stairs. When I whistle all come. I’ll go 
up and see the old fellow and his gal.” 

He Avas implicitly obeyed. Four of the 
Killers hastened through the bach door ; two 
remained in the bar-room, (Elijah Watson was 
one of the two) and the rest went out into the 
court. Pausing for a moment, ere he ascended 
the dark stairway, Bob wiped from his hands 

he blood which he had received in the conflict 
near the California House — for he had been 
in the thickest of the fight, at the moment 
when Hinamel wright fell. Then casting a look 
toward the prostrate form of the negro stretched 
behind the door, his forehead covered with 
blood, Boh whispered to Elijah, who, pale and 
trembling, leaned against the Bar. He then 
M F ■ P the stairs, and placed his ear against 
the door at the head of the flight. All was 
Still with i u Bob pushed open the door arid 
entered. By the light of a tallow candle, the 
“Gentleman” with hair and Avhiskers well 
oiled, his hat and overcoat thrown aside, was 
contemplating the form of the insensible girl, 
who was stretched upon a miserable bed. 

Her hair fell in disorder about her neck 

her eyes were closed and her lips parted ; she 
looked extremely beautiful, but it was a beauty 
like- death. And over her, his false hair look- 
ing quite glossy in the light, stood the aged 
sinner, his eyes fixed upon his unconscious 
victim, and his eyes parted in a singular but 
meaning smile. The noble form of the jiooj 



S3 


girl was stretched before him — in his power 
— in a few Hours she would be safe within Ids 
mansion in the heart of the City. Thus oc- 
cupied he had not heard the opening of the 
door, nor was he aware of the presence of 
Bob, until that personage laid a hand upon his 
arm, saying mildly : 

“ How d’ye do, father.” 

PART XVI. 

THE FATHER AND SO.V. 

The surprise of the Gentleman may be im- 
agined. 

Turning, he beheld that stalwart figure, clad 
m rags which were stained with blood. The 
cap, drawn over the brows, concealed the up- 
per part of the whiskered face. The Gentle- 
man could not believe his ears. He started as 
though he had received a musquet shot. 

As for Bob, he removed his cap. 

“ Good evening, father,” he said, with a 
bland smile, “ IIow have you been these four 
years? You really look much younge #L >an 
when I saw you last. Drowning seems to 
agree with you. And when did you hear from 
mother ! Has the gay old lady departed from 
tliis scene of sublunary care, or has she mar- 
ried Sir Charles ? Upon my word, you don’t 
seem a bit rejoiced to see your long lost son. 
Come, shall we kill the fatted calf, or shall we | 
give each other a real French hug? What, 
still silent? Well, old gentleman, I’ve been 
told that you was dying to see me about that 
five thousand which I got cashed for you. 
Here I am. Now what do you want with 
me?” 

Mr. Jacob D. Z. Hicks was dumb. He 
could not speak — in sober verity, lie had not 
the power to frame a word. (The “ Gentle- 
man,” otherwise called the “English Man- 
ager,” was indeed our old friend Jacob D. Z. 

O 7 

Hicks, who, after his death by drowning, had 
been spending a few years abroad, enjoying 
himself pleasantly, upon the proceeds of the 
Broken Banks.) ] !e now stood with his back 
to the only window of the miserable apart- 
ment, his hands behind him, and his eyes fixed 
in a sort of stupid wonder upon the form of 
the “Prodigal Son,” Bob Blazes, alias Crom- 
well Hicks, 

“Come, father,” said Cromwell, drawing 
the back of his right hand across his scarred 


I face — “This really wont do. You mas 
really — ” Crom made grett use of the word 
really — “ You must really kill the fatted calf 
for your Prodigal Son — or stay — you have a 
belt about your waist, containing some gold and 
)ank notes. Hand it over, if you please. I’ve 
been in rough scenes since you kicked me out 
of the store, and am apt to get cross when 
people don’t mind what I say. Hand it over, 
I say. Strip ! ,# * • 

He advanced a step nearer. 

Mr. Jacob D. Z. Hicks, crouching against 

9 o o 

the window, unbuttoned his vest, and took 
from beneath it, a leathern belt which, to all 

seeming, contained a considerable amount in 
specie. 

“ It’s all I have in the world. Take that, 
and I’m a beggar,” he faltered, 

Cromwell coo ly reached forth his hand to 
take the belt, exclaiming, “ The belt belongs to 
me, and as for this pretty girl, whom you ace 
going to take to your mansion in the city, why 
Don Jorge, the son of Captain Velasquez — 
you mind the name ? — will take care of her, 
ile has the key of your mansion, and is 
now down stairs in the guise of a Killer.” 

If die good Jacob D. Z. Ilicks had turned 
pale at the sight of his supposed son, he grew 
livid at the very name of Captain Velasquez. 
He handed the belt without a word. Ciorn- 
well took it — glanced at the form of the un- 
conscious girl — and then turned to the door — 

“ Hallo ! Don Jorge, I say ! You’re wanted 
up here! Leave Lije in the bar room and 
come up ! ” 

This said, Cromwell opened the belt (with 
the key which Mr. Hicks had handed to him) 
and proceeded to ascertain the amount which 
it contained. Bending toward the light, he 
was thus occupied, when Mr. Jacob D. Z. 
Hicks heard a step on the stairway, and saw 
a form in the door. In the slim gentleman, 
disguised in the rough garb of a Killer, you 
will recognize our friend Don Jorge, whose 
dark-hued face, black hair and whiskers, show 
to advantage under his round-rimmed hat. 

“ The son of Velasquez !” ejaculated Hicks. 

“ Good evening to you, friend of my father,” 
said Don Jorge, advancing, “I am glad to see 
you, though you did n’t exactly treat the old 
man well, when, nearly five years ago, his 
vessel (and yours) was seized off the Brazil 


i 



39 


You left Velasquez to rot in jail, on j Cromwell, and the swarthy visage or the Son 


coast. 

the charge of piracy, while you, safe in Phila- 
delphia, fingered the proceeds of lus former 
ventures. Velasquez has been free some years 
— that is, free from the world. lie was 
hanged like a dog on one of the British Islands. 

o o 

You had reaped a fortune from his zeal in the 
slave trade, but when the hour came for you 
to help him, you sat quiet in Philadelphia, and 
let him Suing. But his son has been on your 
track. He stands before you.” 

II is dark eves gleaming vengeance, he drew 
near the affrighted man, who trembled in every 
nerve. 

“ Yes, father,” said Cromwell, looking up 
for a moment, as he counted the money and 
laid a portion of it upon the table — “ It’s all 
time. And at the very time when you kicked 
me from the store, Don Jorge (who had been 
placed at Yale College by lvis father) heard of 
his lathers death. We left college together^ 
and — ” 


“ I had determined to be revenged upon you 
through your son, when I first left college,” 
interrupted Don Jorge — “But when I disco- 
vered that your son was not your son, why I 
opened my plans fully to him, and we sailed 
together in the Sara Jane, which had been pur- 
chased for me by friends O; my dead father 
not such friends as you, by (leaven! And 
now, sir, after some years of stirring adventure, 
on land and on sea, we have come to this city 
together, and our main object has been to see 
you. By the bye, we tracked you from Paris 
to Liverpool, and from Liverpool to Philadel- 
ph ia. We are here together, your son and the 
son of Velasquez What have you to say for 
yourself?” 

“ And it’s what I call an agreeable coinci- 
dence,” said Cromwell, placing the money in 

• _ 

the belt and locking it again, “Five thousand 
dollars! This isn’t enough, old man.” 

Had she thousands of widows and orphans, 
who had been robbed by Hicks as the Banker, 
have seen him now they would have been 
amply revenged. 

Crouching against the window, (whose 
frame he clutched with hands behind his back) 
the Ex-Banker exhibited a grotesque and yet 
pitiful picture of affright. Ilis eye rolled as 
he surveyed by turns, the scarred face ot 


of Velasquez. 

“ Come, my friend, you must let us have 
more than this,” said Cromwell advancing. 

“ Where do you keep all your money ?” 

1 


interrupted Don Jorge also advancing 
searched your house in 


a 


street to 


night, searched it through and through, but 


couldn’t find a dollar. 


i j 


“ Gentlemen,” gasped the Ex-Banker, 
“have some pity upon an old man 

“ As you pitied me, when you called me 
a bastard and kicked me from the store,” ancf 
Cromwell drew a knife from beneath his ra^s, 

O 

“ As you pitied my father when you left 
him to the gallows,” and thus speaking Dou 

Jorge drew a “ revolver” rom the pocket o. 
his coat. 

Certainly the tide had turned against Mr 
Jacob D. Z. Hicks. 

“ The devil’s up in the city to-night, and 


men have been shot, w 



are worth youi 


weight in gold,” thus spoke Cromwell 
“ One man wouldn’t be missed much — par- 
ticularly a man like you. What say you Don 
Jorge shall we ‘ fix him’ off in tins snug room, 
and then take the girl to his house and cast 
lots for her ?” 

“The girl shall go with us, at all events, 
but as for him, his life depends upon a word. 
Will you tell us where your money is con- 
cealed ? Yes or No ? 

Mr. Jacob D. Z. Hicks fell on his knees. 

9 

while Don Jorge presented the pistol at his 
throat. The girl, meanwhile, under the influ- 
ence of chloroform, lay quiet as death upon 
the bed. 

“Yes or No !” 

Again Don Jorge spoke these words, and 


1 * 


stood over the Ex-Banker, his eyes flash 
with the long indulged lust of vengeance. 


mat 


PART XVII. 

ELIJAH THE CONVICT AND KILLER. 

But at this moment a new actor appeared 


upon the scene. It was 



Watson, who 


pale and trembling had crept up-stairs, and 
now stood on the threshold, his sunken eyes 
shining with a sinister light, as he surveyed 
the face of the kneeling man. fie did not see 

O 

the girl who was stretched insensible on the 
bed, nor was he aware that the victim of the 



40 


intended outrage was his almost sister, his sister 
in everything, but the tie of blood — Kate 
Watson. 

Without seeming to notice either Cromwell 
or Don Jorge, Elijah , advanced, his shabby 
apparel shown in the candle light, as he 
clenched a 41 slung shot” in his right hand. 
Hick-s saw his face, but did not at first recog- 

O 

nize in that visage, distorted by despair, the 
countenance of Elijah Watson, which he had 
seen lour years before through the aperture in 
the Penitentiary wall. 

Elijah advanced, his steps making scarcely 
an audible sound, until beside Don Jorge he 
confronted the kneeling man. His breath 
came hot and gasping through his clenched 
teeth. The effects of the liquor with which 
he had deadened his senses, passed away like 
a flash, as soon as he found himself in the 
presence of Jacob D. Z. Hicks — his father. 

“ Is this Jacob Hicks?” he said in a voice 
whose unnatural emphasis made Don Jorge 
start, and caused something like a chill to run 

through Cromwell’s veins. 

“It is the man, but why don’t you keep 
watch down stairs?” said Cromwell. 

“ The black fellow may revive — you should 
be on the watch,” added Don Jorge. (Be it 
observed that the figure of Cromwell, cast a 
broad shadow over the form of the insensible 
girl.) 

“ Is your name Jacob Hicks? iacob D. Z. 
Hicks?” asked Elijah bending down, until the 
Ex-Banker felt his breath upon his cheek- 

** It is — that is — all” — faltered 1 licks, en- 
deavoring in vain to call to mind the place and 
the time, in which he had seen that face be- 
fore. 

“And you came and- peeped at me through 
the hole in the Penitentiary wall,” gasped 
Elijali — “You did, and went away again, 
know in’ that I was your son. You looked 
at me and left me to four years of days and 
nights in that stone coffin” — 

Q 

He raised the slung shot, as though he would 

O 7 o 

crush the skull of the kneeling man, while Don 

Q 7 

Jorge and Cromwell stood vacant-eyed and 
wonder-stricken at his words, but even as the 
blow was about to fall, Hicks shrieked, in a 
voice whose accent of pitiful fright was pain- 
ful to hear — 

“It is Elijah! It is my son ! Elijah, I 


| saw you, four years ago, but could not relieve 
you. Hear me, and then — if you can — kill 
your father. There, at your shoulder, stands 
the man who has lor twenty-three years 
cheated you out of the rig) its of a son, while 
you were cast an outcast on the world. That 
man’s mother, also your mother and rny wife, 
gave you birth twenty-three years ago, and 
sent you out into the world without father or 
name, while her bastard occupied your place 
by my hearthstone. You, the real son, was 
condemned to poverty and want, while he. the 
child of adultery, took your place, and from 
the petted boy became the profligate man. 
Listen, Elijah — listen — you must hear me.” 

And Jacob D. Z. Hicks clutched the Con- 
vict by the knees, and told him, in rapid and 
broken tones, the real story of his parentage. 
Cromwell’s face displayed all the changes of 
wonder and hatred — wonder at the revelation, 
and hatred equally divided between Hicks and 
Elijah. As for Don Jorge, he listened and 
burst into a roar of laughter — 

“I vow,” he cried, with a Spanish oath, 
“It’s as good as a play. If they’d only sing 
it, we should have an Opera on the spot !” 

“Well met, father and son,” — and Crom- 
well advanced, his scarred face swollen with 
rage — “The father, a bankrupt merchant, a 
man who is ashamed to bear his own name — 
the son, a ‘ number’ from the Penitentiary ! 
Embrace your daddy, Lije ! You’re welcome 
to him !” 

“You hear him — you will protect me? * 
cried Hicks, clutching the knees of the Con- 
vict. 

Elijah was silent. His lips writhed over 
his set teeth ; there w r as a swelling of the 

O 

chords of his throat; the slung-shot fell with 
his right hand to his side. 

“ And yet you could Took through the wall 
— and see me siltin’ in the cell — and know 
that I was put there for passin’ a counterfeit 
on one of your banks — and go away and 
leave me ! You could !” 

Was it a tear that rolled down his sunken 
cheek? 

“ lie did — he saw you there, and left you,” 
cried Cromwell, now anxious to inflame the 
Convict against Hicks — “ He made a Convict 
of you, and that’s a fact !” 4 

Elijah turned and looked steadily upon the 



41 


form of his “ false” Brother. He surveyed 
him from head to loot, while his eyes seemed 
to sink deeper into their sockets, and his lips 
parted in a spasmodic grimace — 

“Bah! I’d sooner herd with all the Con- 
victs of the Eastern Penitentiary, than to own 
a man like you for brother, or a thing like that 
for father. Go at one another — come ! He’s 
a swindlin' bank director, and you’re a slave 
pirate— you’ll just suit. I’m only a Convict. 
I’m not good enough company for you two.” 

At these words Don Jorge burst into a fresh 
peal of laughter ; Cromwell grew red with 
rage ; the ex-merchant did not relax his hold 
upon the Convict’s knees. 

“You miserable felon, do you dare to use 
such language to me ? To me ?” 

Thus speaking, Cromwell advanced with 
the knife ; Elijah folded his arms, and regarded 
him with a broad grin upon his pale face, The 
composed attitude ot the Convict — his head,! 
with its short black hair and protuberant fore- 
head, set firmly on his shoulders — seemed to 
disconcert the “Slaver,” otherwise known as 
the Leader of the Killers. 

“ Why don’t you strike ? Do you think 
that a man who has stood our years in a stone 
coffin is afraid of a thing like you? You can 
play the devil with niggers — I don’t doubt 
that. But you daresent strike me !” 

Cromwell did strike — it was a swift and 
terrible blow — but the Convict knocked up 1 
bis arm, and forced him back upon the bed, 
his hand clutching the throat of his “ false” bro- 
ther, until that brother’s face grew livid as the 
visage of a dying man. Then, as he held him 
writhing on the bed, he for the first time be- 
held the motionless form and death-like lace of 
4 Kate 

“ It’s Kate !” he shouted, and pressed her 
hands. They were cold. Her eves were 
shut. There was no breath in her nostrils — 
no motion in her pulseless bosom. With her 
(lowing brown hair, and magnificent form, she 
looked very beautiful, but her beauty was the 
beautv of death. 

“Who’s done this?” cried Elijah, rushing 
to Don Jorge, then to Ilicks, and last of all to 
Cromwell, who stood gasping for breath, the 
print of the Convict’s fingers yet fresh upon 
his throat — “ Who, I say ? Who’s killed that 


% 

girl ? We aint brother and sister by blood, but 
we are brother and sister by the years of 
poverty and starvation we’ve passed together. 
Feel her hands — they’re like ice. Look at 
her — I swear she’s dead and one of you has 
killed her.” 

At these word^, uttered with every accent of 
an agony that w r as like madness, the three lis- 
teners could not repress an ejaculation of hor- 
| ; ror. • • , . • 

Cromwell rushed to the bed — “She is 

dead, by !” he cried with an oath. Don 

Jorge followed him, and even Hicks, pale and 
shaking, drew near the miserable couch, 
whereon she was stretched in her deathly love- 
liness. 

“ Dead !” cried Jorge — and felt her cold 
hands. 

Hicks could only ejaculate thejvord “ Chlo- 
roform.” . , . ( ( | , ; , 

Hicks could not frame a word, but sank 
helplessly upon the bed, not from remorse so 
much, as from a terror of the results of this 
scene. : . - • 

The convict now presented a terrible picture. 
Tearing away the coat from his neck, as though 
it choked him, he clutched the slung shot, and 
looked into every face — his limbs trembling 
as with the impulse of a madman’s strength. 

“Who did this ?” he said, in a voice that 
resembled the cry of a drowning man. 

“This man — with Chloroform,” answered 
Cromwell, retreating from the mad stare of the 
convict — “lie hired the nigger to bring her 
up here, and the nigger poisoned her with 
Chloroform. I overheard them talking about 
their plans last night — ” 

Elijah took the candle, and bent over the 
bed, surveying the face of the dead girl. Her 
eyelashes rested dark and distinct upon her 
colorless cheeks — her lips were parted dis- 
closing her clear white teeth — her noble bust, 
from which the shawl had been tossed aside, 
was motionless in death. How the convict 
bent over her and crushed her hands in his 
rough fingers, and spoke to her by name — how 
he raised her from the bed, only to see her fall 
back, motionless and dead again — how he, in 
his mad way, endeavored to call her back to 
life by reminding her of the years of want and 
suffering they had passed together — we need 
not picture it, 



42 


Whife he was thus eojaired Cromwell 

o o 

buckled the money belt about his waist, ami 
beckoned to Don Jorge. They passed with 
noiseless step to the door, and Cromwell took 
the key from the lock. In a moment they had 
passed the threshold, and Cromwell having 
placed the key in the lock, in tke outside, was 
about closing the door, when 1 licks — his wig 

cast aside — darted forward and endeavored to 
leave the room. 

Cromwell said nothing, but as the Ex-broker 
came lie planted a blow on his forehead, which 
sent him spinning back into the room. This 
done, he closed the door and locked it on the 

outside, remarking to his comrade in a whis- 
per — 

“ We’ll leave ’em there together. The 
room has but one window and the shutters are 
nailed fast, ard*as for the door I’ve got the key 
in mv pocket. Come — let us go down stairs, 

v i o 

and give the Killers the slip, while we go up 
and search Hicks’ house in the city. We’ll 
search it once more. His money is there, 

v 

I’m sure of it. By the bye, they’ll have a 
good time of it in there, the father, the son and 
the dead girl !” 

He spoke as they stood in the darkness at 
the head of the stairs, which led down into the 
bar room. They could see the light from the 
bar room, shining upon the foot of the stairs. 

“ Still it’s bad about that girl,” said Don 
Jorge in a voice that was agitated by a 
tremor. 

They descended the narrow stairway, 
Cromwell going first. 

“Yes, we'll leave ’em up there together, 
while we go and search the old man’s house,” 

o f , . , /- . 

he said as they reached the foot of the stairs 
— “ Then when we have a 11 his money, why 
hurrah for Cuba ! I say Don Jorge — ” 

Half turning toward his companion, who 
was still in the dark, Cromwell with one side 
of his face touched by the light, placed his foot 
upon the threshold. At that moment, a cry 
was heard, and an hand striking from the bar 
•oora, descended upon Crom we IPs breast. Don 
Jorge saw the blow, and thought he saw the 
flash of a knife; the next thing that he saw 
was the body of Cromwell falling forward into 

the bar room, with a heavy sound. • 

It was but a step to the door — Don Jorge 
rushed forward — and as his way was blocked 


by die quivering body of his friend — he saw 
the giant negro standing in the bar room, not a 
foot from the head of Cromwell, his hideous 
face overspread with a grin of triumph, and a 
huge knife glittering in his uplifted hand. That 
knife glittered with the life blood of Cromwell. 

o 

The negro, during the absence of the Killers, 

O 7 O 

had recovered from the effects of the blow — 
had procured the knife — and waited behind 
the door, ns he heard the steps of Crqmwell 
upon the stairs. He had struck but once ; the 
blow was sufficient. Prostrate on his face, the 
blood from the wound trickling over the boards 
of the floor, Cromwell quivered for a moment 
like a man suspended on a gibbet — made a 
grasp at the floor with his hands — and then 
was quiet and motionless. He never spoke 
again. 

And over him, triumphant and chuckling 
stood the negro, “ But*ine” — the knife which 
he shook, dripping is red drops, upon his 
black and brawny arm. 

“ Come on you dam Killer,” he shouted — 
“ 1 gib you some more ob de same sort. Hah, 
yah, y-a*h! You strike a nigger do you? 
Come on !” 

In his rage, he planted his foot upon the 
back of the dead man’s head, and showing his 
broad black chest, awaited the approach of 
Don Jorge. The Cuban had seen much of 

o 

blood in Jii.s time, but this scene horrified him 
in every nerve. He felt for his revolver — it 
was not in its usual place, under his vest — he 
had left it in the room above. (Inarmed, de- 
fence's, lie was at the mercy of the giant, 
whose brute strength, was sufficient to grind 
him to powder, Could he rush past the Bul- 
gine and gain the den which led into the a ’ey! 
Or should he endeavor to escape by the back 
way, and make good his retreat, into the next 

street ? • 

Not much time was allowed hitn or thought. 

Seeing that he did not advance, and reasoning 
from his hesitation that he was either afraid or 
unarmed, the Negro sprang toward him, tramp- 
ling the body of Cromwell beneath his teet. ^ 

“Come to me, if you dar, you dam Killer 
lief!” he cried — Don Jorge saw the knife — 
sprang hack ward, and felt a door give way be- 
hind him. He gathered hnnself up, and in an 
instant was out of the back door, and pursu- 
ing hts way through the narrow alley which 



43 


led into the public street. The negro did not 
follow him. And thus leaving Cromwell to 
his fate, Don Jorge passed into the street, 
avoided the crowd, and made the best of his 
way to the mansion of Mr. Hicks, in the city. 
He did not recognize a single Killer in the 
crowds which he encountered ; they had been 
attracted from their watch at the end of the 
alley by other and more stirring scenes. 

As for the Killers who had been stationed in 
front of the groggery in Dog Alley, they had 
been led from their posts, soon after Cromwell 
went up stairs. The riot had rolled its waves 
of tumult and blood from the California House 
to Dog Alley. While Cromwell lay dead in 
the bar room, it had reached its heighth. Fire- 
men, Negroes, and Killers were mingled to- 
gether in the dense crowd which now blocked 
up the wide street at the end of Dog Alley — 
their faces reddened by the glare which came 
from a burning house. Pistol shots were heard, 

O 7 

mingled with the yell o riot and the short 

*■ 

quick cry of dying men. While the Negroes 
and the Killers, penned up in the dense crowd, 
maintained their conflict, the firemen nobly en- 
deavored to do their duty and extinguish the 
flames of the burning house. They were at- 
tacked by portions of the mob, and the riot 
only grew more desperate and bloody. It 
was a battle in all its bloodshed — a battle 
stripped of the glare of military glory — a 
mere vulgar affair of butchery and murder, 
carried on by men whom rum and blood had 

m* 

transformed into devils, A 


PART XV III. 

THE BULGlNE AT BAY. 

When the riot in the street was at its highest 

Ur * * • 

a small body of the rioters separated from the 
scene, and plunged into Dog Alley, which, so 
near the scene of uproar, was all quiet and 
d a rk . 

“ Let’s git Dob Blazes and go at ’em again !” 

o o o 

cried the foremost of these rioters, and, ten in 
number, they hastened to the groggery and 
poured into its door. 

“ Come on, you dam Kille rs !” — a voice sa- 
luted them — “Come on, you dam lief!” — 
and they beheld the Bulgine, half naked, 
.standing j n one corner, the knife in his hand 
and his foot upon the dead body oi Cromwell. 


Furious with liquor and riot, the comrades 
of Cromwell (known to them as Bob Blazes) 
recoiled in horror at the sight. 

a 

^Cromwell’s face was upturned, the eyes gla- 
ring and the lips distorted. 

The Killers raised a shout, rushed forward, 
but the negro was ready for them. Bracing 
himself in the corner, his foot planted on the 
breast of the dead man, he answered their 
shout as they came on, and described a terri- 
ble circle before his breast with the blade of 
his bloody knife. 

ji 

“Git some powder and lead !” — cried one 
of the band — “I’d like to wing him as he 

O 

stands there : go, Bill, and be quick about it — ” 

But another of the band made a suggestion 
in a whisper, which was received with great 
satisfaction. This suggestion made, the Killers 
retired in a hotly, leaving the negro alone with 
the dead man. A portion of their number at- 
tained the rear of the groggery, and effectually 
closed and fastened the back door, while the 
others nailed and secured the door and window 
which opened on Dog Alley. 

In a few moments the groggery was in 
flames. 

How it was done it is not necessary to re- 
late ; but as the flames burst upon the darkness 
of the a ley, the conflict in the neighboring 
street came like a wave of fists and clubs, and 
faces stamped with frenzy, to the very door of 
the burning hovel. Chased like dogs before 

a o 

the hounds into the aliey, a number of negroes 
beheld themselves between the clubs and pis- 
tols of the Killers and the fury of the flames. 
The combat was renewed ; negroes and whiles 
were lighting in the narrow court, and the 
l lames, mounting to the roof, began to commu- 
nicate with the adjoining hovels — yes, with 
the flames which ascended from the house 
which stood in the next street. # 

At this period a sound was heard which 
chilled a thousand hearts with involuntary 
terror. 

That sound resounded from the midst of the 
llames. It was like the howl of a wild beast at 
bay. 

“ There’s a man in that house !” roared a 
number of voices in chorus. 

“ Let him burn !” answered one of the Kil- 
lers, as his lace, streaked with dirt and blood, 
was reddened by the flames. 



44 




The sound was heard again, and as a thou- 
sand eves were uplifted, there appear<^l on the 
rool ot the groggery a huge dark form, envi- 
roned by flames, and bearing the form of a 
woman in his arms. She was insensible, per- 
chance dead — her dress fluttered in a puff of 
air as he held her aloft in his brawny arms — 
md his black tace, reddened by the flames, was 
seen beneath the form which he held on high. 
Seen lor a moment only, for a cloud of smoke 
roiled over him, and he disappeared. 

Then a cry rose from the crowd — negroes 
and whites, firemen and Killers — spectators at 
distant windows — that you would not have 
forgotten in a life-time. 

The cloud of smoke had rol led away, and — 
There, on the very edge of the roof, stood 
the negro, his half-naked frame raised to its full 
s eight, as he raised the body of the girl above 
his iiead, straining his arms as though lie was 

r O D 

about to dash himself and his burden upon the 
heads of the multitude 

“ Save the gal !” 1 T 

“ Bring a ladder!” 

“Go into the next house and get on the 
roof — you may help her thar!” 

“ Go it, Killers-!” 

“ Down with the niggers !” r 
Cries like these were heard amid the tumult 
of the crowd, and then a black cloud swept 
the negro and hi f s burden suddenly from the 
, sight. The next instant a rumor spread among 
the Killers — originated we cannot tell how — 
dial Elijah Watson was shut up in the burning 
house. Neither can we tell why the fact had 
not been thought of before; possibly the rioters 
had been so much engaged in their arduous 
duties that they had not time to think of him. 

“ Save Lije!” cried one of the band, “we 
can get on to the roof of the next house, and 
catch hold of him somehow. Boys! Hurray 
for Lije !” 

The roof of the adjoining house — we mean 
the one on the left, as yet untouched by flames 
— was some feet higher than the roof of the 

groggery. 

■ _ 

part xrx. 

HICKS, ELIJAH AND KATE. J | 

Leaving the scene of clamor and excitement, 

© 

we will go back in our narrative to the mo- 


ment when Uromwell locked the door, thus 

imprisoning Elijah and Hicks, and shutting 

’hem up within thick walls with the body of 

# w 

the dead girl. 

Elijah was endeavoring, in his rude way, to 
restore the insensible girl to life — chafing her 
hands and calling her byname — when the 
harsh sound of the key turning in the lock 
struck on his ear. Raising his head, he saw 
the door fast closed, and poor Hicks in a half 
prostrate position, his bald head visible, and 
his glossy wig dangling from one ear. Con- 
tused by the blow administered by Cromwell, 
just before lie locked the door, Hicks was en- 
gaged in raising himself to His feet, meanwhile 
rubbing his forehead with his right hand. 
Hick s was by no means the smooth and smi- 
ting gentleman we beheld last night, with well- 
oiled wig and whiskers, spotless shirt bosom 
and diamond pin. Ilis whiskers had shared 
the fate of his wig; the diamond pin had fallan ; 
and a spot of blood from his forehead stained 
the spotless white of his shirt bosom. Cer- 
tainly, Mr. Hicks looked the very picture of a 
defeated candidate the day after election. 

“ What’s the matter with you, old man ? ” 
said Elijah, taking some pity upon the discon- 
solate condition of Mr. Hicks. 

“ They’re gone — ” began Hicks. 

“ Who keers ? ” quoth Elijah. 

“ But they’ve locked the door, and — ” he 

* 

cast his eyes toward the dead body of Kate 
Watson. 

“ Left me and you together, alone with the 
corpse,” answered Elijah, with a frightful grin, 
‘ r Look at the winder, Hicks — it's nailed shut. 
Try the door — the panels are thick, and you 
can’t get it open for your life. Do you think 
I’d open it for you ? No, Hicks, you must 
come here, and sit one side o’ the corpse while 
I sit on the other, and tell me what you think 
o’ yourself. Come. What! you won’t?” 

With a scowl and an oath, Elijah advanced 
upon the kneeling man, and dragged him to the 
bed. lie forced him down upon it, and t!ien 

seated himself — the body of Kate between 
them — and the candle-light showing the three 
faces — Elijah’s pale and malignant, Hicks’ 
pale and ashy with terror — the dead girl s pale 

and very beautiful. 

w 

“ Jist feel her hands ” — he forced the ex 



45 


m 


franker to take the hand of the dead girl within 
his own — “ how could you do it?” 

It was a singular scene. That lone room in 
a den of pollution — door locked and window 
nailed — the body of the dead girl upon the 
bed, and the Convict Son accusing the Rich 
Father of the Murder. Hicks was terribly 
agitated, not only on account o* the sudden 
death of Kate Watson, but by reason of the 
strange light which flashed from the eye of his 
Felon Son. 

‘ I didn’t mean to do it,” he faltered, “ I told 
the black fellow to put the wet rag to her lips, 
so as to render her insensible for a few mo- 
ments — ” 

“ And what did you intend to do with her?’’ 
was the next question. It was a puzzling 
question, "but Hicks endeavored to meet it. 

“ To do her a service — to — to — bring her 

o 

out upon the stage. Since my failure I have 
been on the best terms with the English Mana- 
gers — I could have made her fortune — ” 

“Father, you lie !” was the response of Eli- 

« 

jah, “ You know what you intended to make 
of her ; and after all you’d a-left her to die in 
the streets, as you left me to die in thePeni-^ 
tentiary. Why, when I see you there, and see 
this poor dead girl stretched between us, and 
hear you lyin’ in that way, I wish myself back 
again in jail. You’re enough to make a whole 
State’s Prison blush.” 

As he said this, Hicks turned his eyes aside 
— he could not meet that steady gaze. 

“ I’ve half a notion to kick open that den and 
hand you to the police, and see how you like 
a few years in Cherry Hill. Then I’d come, 
ha, ha, ha — hee ! I’d come and have a peep ' 
at you — jist a p-e-e-p through the hole in the 
wall !” 

In a voice perfectly cold with fright, Hicks 
begged for mercy. He reminded Elijah that 
it was not his fault, that he had been con- 
demned to a life of misery and degradation. He 
spoke of his wealth — wealth hidden in his city 
mansion — and offered to share it with his 

convict son. 

“ Only get me out of this difficulty — release 
me from this room — let us go together — if I 
don’t keep my word, why then deliver me to 
the police for — for — murder ! 

Elijah reflected. * fTf 


He played absently with the hand of the 
deceased girl. 

He parted the gl° ss y brown hair aside from 

her white forehead. 

‘'You consent?” whispered Hicks. 

“ How much money have you got?” asked 

Elijah meditatively. - 

“ Twenty thousand in gold — it’s hid in my 
house — no one knows of it but myself — you 
know I’m in the city under an assumed name 

— and if you consent we’ll leave it to-morrow 

— leave it together, and — ” 

“ What of her ?” — Elijah laid his hand over 
the face of the dead girl. Hicks’ visage fell. 

“ What of her ?” — There was no answering 
that. 

Elijah rose and stalked up and down the 
oor, his hands behind his back and his head 
on his breast, whi-le Hicks, shuddering and cold, 
removed himself as far as possible from the 
corse, without actually falling ofl the bed. 

“Where is the money ?” said Eijah, turning 
abruptly in his walk. 

Hicks answered in a quiet whisper, and 

described the location of the house and of tha 
money. 

“ Give me the key ?” 

With a shaking hand Hicks drew a key 
from his vest pocket. Elijah buried it in tha 
pocket of his shabby coat, and then gently 
lifting Kate’s body tore the ragged quilt from 
te bed, and proceeded with the aid of a clasp 
knife to divide it into slips. 

“Put your hands behind your back — ” 

and Elijah fixed his eye upon the trembling 
sinner. 

Ei i. consented like a child, Elijah bound 
his hands firmly, with two of the strips. 

“ Stick out your feet.” Hicks complied, 
and in a moment his ankles were hound. 

“ Now it will take me just half an hour to go 
lo your House and back. You can remain 
quiet here alongside o’ Kate, as your intentions 
were good and you need not be afraid of tlio 
body you know ? I’ll come back in half an 
hour, ami then if you have told me a ie, Ell—” 

Hicks waiis with much anxiety for the con- 
clusion of the sentence. 

Then I’ll tell you what I’ll do.” 

“You are not going to leave me here, in this 

condition?” cried the ex-broker, the cold sweat 


¥ 



glistening on lus forehead — “O ior mercy 
sake I be? — I be<r ” 

to (-5 

Elijah seized a fragment of an old chair, and 
Vvnh one blow demolished the sash of the win- 
dow ; it was the work of a few moments to 
make an opening in the boards without. Stur- 
dily brandishing the chair leg, he knocked 
away the lower hoards and looked out. 44 Opens 
on ashed! Good!” He placed his hand on 
Un wmdow sill, and looked over his shoulder 

“Keep cool, Hicks,” he said, and again that 
frightful grimace came over his face. The 
next moment he was gone. His foot-steps 
were heard upon the boards of the shed — 

there was a sound like a man leaping down 
upon the solid earth — and then all was quiet. 

* Hicks round himsell alone with the dead. 
Could lie have moved his arms or limbs, he 
would have placed as great a distance as might 
be, letween himself and the bed, but there le 
was, pinioned like a “ sheep for the slaughter,” 
the body of Kate by his side — nay one of her 
hands touched his knee. He could just stir, 
but he could not remove himself from the bed. 
The candle stood on the floor, flinging its 
smoky light over the naked walls, and upward 
into his face, lie looked over his right shoul- 
der — the pale face of vate was there, hair 
streaming to the shoulders, and the cold beauty 
of death upon every lineament. The candle 
begins to sputter in the socket. What if it 
goes out and leaves him in darkness, and with 
the dead hand upon his knee ? Hark ! There 
are shouts in the room below. Some one is 
coming to Isis rescue. lie cares not who it is, 
only so that he is relieved from his horrible 
position. The sound of a scuffle is heard — 
they are coming — they are coming ! Still no 
hand un ocks the door. Half dead with terror- 
Hicks hears voices in the yard — 

“ Bar the doors, and let’s bum the nigger in 
his den !” 

Hicks utters a frightful howl, and then the 
candle goes out. No ! It flashes up again, 
and flings a horrible light over the room, and 
upon the face of the dead. Then the cam le 
does indeed go out and all is darkness. 

“Help ! Help ! Murder ! Murder I*’ 

Hut no one hears him. There is the tram- 
pling of feet in the yard, and shouts as of a 
thousand men in the alley — his voice is 
drowned. Still he shouts and screams until he 


is hoarse, and his vrtiee can only raise into a 
half coherent murmur. * 

The dead body is still by his side. He 
cannot see it, but he feels the hand upon his 
knee. 

Now a new fear assails him. There is the 
smell of fire, and the room seems rapidly fill- 
ing with smoke. He breathes with difficulty. 
The noise of flames, now mingles with the 
tramp oi feet and the yell of the mob. 

Suddenly a red light flashes in the window. 
The rioters have fired the shed — it burns — 
it burns — and the smoke whirls in, through 
flhe aperture in the boards. The boards catch 
next and with a desperate effort, the wretched 
man starts to his feet, only to fail, at full length 
upon the floor. 

At this instant a noise is heard — it is in 
the room — it completes the terrors of the 
miserable man — 

“ 0^ ! the bell has rung for the first act, and 
I am late” — 

I It is the voice of the poor supernumerary, who 
reviving from the death-like stupor engendered 
by Chloroform, now imagines herself once 
more in the Theatre. She is not dead, Tor the 
^Chloroform, well nigh fatal, only produced for 
a while the appearance of death. But Hicks 
prostrate on his face, does not think of her as 
living — he is sure that he hears the voice of 
a ghost. Alas, poor Hicks ! Was ever fraudu- 
lent Bank Director so horribly visited as you 
are now ? 

“ Is it a dream ?” cries Kate, as she awakes 
from the delicious frenzy of Chloroform and 
finds herself environed by flames — the roar- 
ing in her ears — the red light in her face — 
“ Has the Theatre taken fire ?” 

She bounds from the bed — and sees the 
prostrate form — at the sight, she remembers 
how the hand of the Negro was fixed upon 
her mouth, and how he bore her up stairs in 
the darkness. 

“ Are you living ?” she shrieKs — “ Speak ? 
What does this mean? Am I to be burned 
alive 

To which the unfortunate I ticks, responds 
as he rubs his face over the floor : 

“Cut my feet!” (That is, cut the cords 
which bind my feet, but under these circum- 
stances, one does not look for style.) 

“There is a knife somewhere — cut ray 



47 


feet! Cut my fe°t! Cut* — cut — cut — ” and 
at every “ cut,” Hicks, in his efforts to rise, 
rubs his face against the boards. 

She remembers the voice ; it is the English 
Manager, lias this scene been the result of 
some plot of his contriving? She does not 
pause to argue the question but hunts eagerly 
for the knife. After a hurried search she finds | 
it, and hacks away at the strips which bind 
the wrists and ankles of the unhappy “Mana- 
ger” alias “Ex-Bank Director.” 

At length his feet and hands are free; he 
rises heavily, and finds himself confronted by j 
this beautiful girl, whose hair swefeps in waves, 
over her breast and shoulders. 

“What does this mean?” she cries — her 
eyes wild with terror. 

Stupified by the smoke and heat, Hicks 
cannot answer, he can only stare at the pale 
face of Kate, which every other moment is 
reddened by flashes of light. She seizes him, 
and shakes him by the arm — “Is there no 
way of escape? Must we be burned alive ?” 

He tears himself from. her, and rushes to the 
window, but the smoke and flame drives him 
back. To the door, uttering horrible cries, 
but the door is locked, and he only hurts his 
feet by kicking the thick panels. And then, 
utterly overcome — scorched by hoat and 
choked by smoke — Hicks falls upon the floor 
and lays there, like a bundle of “ forgotten 
ffoods.” 

O 

Poor Kale ! Scarce knowing what to make 
of all this, she stands there, with the crimson 
light upon her face, and in the folds of her 
waving hair — she presses her hands to her 
bosom as she gasps for breath — she is con- 
scious that she cannot live, in that horrible 
place, but a few moments longer. 

With toil and poverty life is sweet to her; 
and she is struggling for it now, with every 
gasp of her hard-drawn breath. . 

But hark! Heavy steps upon the stair — 
a heavier sound against tfie door — it yields — 
and falls upon the body of the miserable Hicks. 
But what horrible apparition appears in the 
doorway? 

Kate screams with terror; it is the Negro, 
who placed his hand to her mouth — he stands 
there, black and hideous, his white eyeballs 
rolling in his jetty face. 

“Dey burn dis darkey alive ? Yah — hah ! f 


Guess not! Dis darkey good for to stan’ fire. 
Say ! You dar Missus?” 

And with a bound he is at her side — his 
brawny arm is about her waist. 

“ Come now ! Don’t you kick and scream 
— up stairs is de garret — tote along, Mis- 
sus !” 

With these words he bears her from the 
room, up the narrow stairs ; up a narrower 
stairway, and then from a trap door, out upon 
a roof in flamesJ 

Bu Vine instinctively determines to save 
her — but when he finds himself on the hot 
roof, surrounded by flames — he gives up all 
for lost, and howling upon the Mob, who yell 
below, prepares to dash her down, and at the 
same time beat his brains out, against the 
pavement. 


/ PART XX. 

THE POPLAR BOX, 

When Elijah left his father, bound and help- 
less in the upper room of the den kept by the 
Bulgine, he made the best of his way into the 
heart of the city. Hurrying from the scene 
of the riot, he soon approached the house 
which, for a month or more, had been quie tly 
occupied by Mr. Jacob D. Z. Hicks. It was 
an old three story brick, with its gable fronting 
on the street, from which it was separated by 
a sma 1 yard. Elijah’s blood was in a tumult 
as lie opened the gate and approached the door. 
The shutters of the house were closed from 
cellar to garret, and it was cast into shadow 
by the neighboring mansions. 

“Now, we’ll see whether the old man lied 
or not,” said Elijah, as he opened the door 
with the key furnished him by Mr. Hicks. 

lie entered the house. All was desolate and 
still. He made his way straight to the room 
designated by his father, where stood the iron 
safe containing all the wealth of the old man. 
This room was on the third story, and in tlie 
back part of the house. Elijah ascended the 
stairs, and was astonished to find a lighted 
lamp placed on the floor of the entry in the 
third story. The door of the back room was 
opened, and a sound like he rustling of papers 

struck on his ear. 

«• Who can it be ?” the thought flashed over 
him. He quietly took off his boots, and, pass- 



48 


ing the lamp, approached the door and looked 
within. 

A man was standing near an iron safe, on 
which a lamp was placed. His back was to- 
ward Elijah, and he was engaged in examining 
the papers which he had taken from the safe. 
On a chair by his side was scattered a mass of 
gold and silver, mingled with bank notes. 

“At last I’vd found the old scoundrel’s 
Ark” — said the man, by way of soliloquy, 
and Elijah recognized the voice of Don Jorge. 
It was Don Jorge, attired in the guise of a 
Killer. Elijah stood in a position which ena- 
bled him to watch all the movements of the 

* 

Cuban, without being himself observed ; and 
Elijah’s heart beat quick and his eyes glis- 
tened at the sight of the money which laid on 
the chair. 

44 I’ll let him rob the chest,” — such was his 
thought, “and as he comes out of the room I’ll 
force him to surrender.” 

4 b A 

At this moment he caught a side-view of 
the Cuban’s face. It was stamped with a look 
of ineffable triumph, which displayed his 
white teeth under his dark mustache, and gave 
fresh brilliancy to his dark eyes. 

44 The money is good enough,” he solilo- 
quised, “ these thousands will enable me to 
keep afloat for a year, at least, in Paris, or in 
some other continental city. As for the Cu- 
ban speculation, undertaken by some of my 
hot-headed compatriots — it’s a humbug, and 
I 11 have nothing more to do with it. They 
talk o love for their native land. Pshaw ! 
Give me money, and I'll make ray native land 
wherever wine and women are to be bought or 
sold.” 

With this remark he took die light from the 
top of the safe, and, sinking on his knees, he 
began to examine the interior. “There is a 
particular box which I must have” — he ex- 
claimed— 44 It contains all the transactions be- 
tween my father and Hicks — for that matter, 
between my father and more than live mer- 
chants of tins good city, who have mac e for- 
tunes by the slave trade. When I have the 
box in my hands I will hold a rod over their 
heads — ” 

Peering into the safe, he presently drew 
forth the object of his search — a box of un- 
painted poplar, not more than a loot long and 


six inches deep, which opened with a shf; _ 

lid. 

“ I can see no lock, and yet this slide s 
difficult to draw. Ah I It gives way—” 

, He began to draw the lid, which moved 
slowly as he passed his thumb in the crevice 
i i te end; at the same time holdings the box 

■ * 1 „ « I ] * J I 1 1 O 

tightly against his breast. 

Elijah was watching him all the while — 
^panting for breath, and sinking [his nails into 
the frame oi the door, as he endeavored to 
subdue his excitement. 

“Now we shall read *the transactions oi 
Captain Velasquez and Mr. Jacob Hicks,” 
exclaimed Don Jorge — and it was the last 
word he ever spoke. The report of a pistol 
was heard. He sank backward on the floor, 
the box scattered into fragments over the room, 
while the lamp was momentarily obscured, by 
, a veil of blueish smoke. 

Elijah, stupifled by the sudden report, rushed 
into the room, and took hold of the prostrate 
man. His face was .blue with the death a rr. 

* O 

ony. Once his lips moved — his eyes rolled in 
i heir sockets — and then his lips were motion- 
less and his eyes fixed in death. The blood 
oozed slowly from a wound near his heart. 
H is knees bent, and his legs doubled under 
him, he lay dead upon the floor, his arms 
thrown out, on either hand, the fingers stiff 
and cramped. 

Mr. Hicks for reasons of his own, had con- 
cealed a loaded pistol in the poplar box, which 
was connected with the sliding lid, by a com- 
plication of clock work machinery. The pis- 
tol was so arranged that the drawing of the lid 
pulled the trigger. And the lid could not be 
drawn, unless the box was placed against the 
breast, in such a manner, that the muzzle of 
the concealed pistol, would rest \vithin ten 
inches of the heart of the man, who mhht 

w o 

attempt to open it. 

Don Jorge had drawn the sliding lid, and 
paid for that trifling deed with his life. 

He lay dead upon the floor; as dead indeed, 
as any Negro that he had ever pitched from 
the deck of his Slaver, in the midst of the 

broad Ocean. 

% 

Elijah wasted no time in useless efforts to 
restore the dead man to life. Gathering up 
the gold and silver, which laid upon the cinir, 



49 


he poured it into his pockets, together with a 
goodly store of bank notes. Then without a 
word, he quietly left the room; and descended 


the stairs 


efore five minutes were gone, he 


had left the house, carefully locking the front 
door behind him. 

“The old man did not lie — there was 
money there,’ he soliloquized, as he hurried 
back to the scene of the Riot,” “ wonder if he 


intended that box for me ?” 

l ie lost no time, but made the best of his 
way toward the Den of the Bulgine, and ap- 
proached it by the, alley, which communicated 
with the back door. Emerging from the dark- 
ness of the alley, he heard at once the roar of 
the mob, and the roar of the flames. The yard 
was deserted The flames ascended from the 
shed to the roof. Elijah heard the shout of 
the multitude, who were packed together in 
front of the house, in Dog Alley, and at once re- 
membered the condition in which he had left 
his father. How should he save him? Jumping 
upon the fence, he saw at a glance that he might 
ascend to the roof of the next house, (which 
was deserted) by placing a board upon the shed 
which rose from the ground to its second story 
tvindow. It was the worlq of a few moments 
to tear a board from the fence — climb upon the 
shed, drawing the board after him — and then 
rest one end of the board upon the shed, while 
the other reached the edge of the low roof. 
Crawling cat-like on hands and knees, Elijah 
began the ascent. Half-way up, the board be- 
gan to slip, but Elijah kept on, and mounted 


the roof, at the same moment that the board 
fell beneath him. Once on the roof, he as- 
cended to the ridge, and saw at the first glance, a , 
sight which quickened his blood. The faces 
of the mob — the Den of the Bulgine in flames 

« t a* . i n # r n ,* 5 0 * . f T -. 1ril , h'.- 


and the Bulgine himself standing black and 
gigantic, in the centre of the flames — standing 
upon the roof, and near the very edge — with 
the body of a woman in his arms. 

“It’s Kate!” cried Elijah, and with an in- 
coherent yell, he sprang upon the burning roof. 
The multitude beheld him, and answered his 


yell with shouts of horror and ejaculations of 
feverish suspense. They saw him wrapped in 
smoke and flame, and in an instant, saw him 
emerge from the cloud and reach the Negro’s 
side. And then the shouts of the spectators, 
as they beheld the figures on the roof, now re- 


1 vealed in light, and now lost in smoxe, as- 
cended tumultuously upon the air. 

“ The nigger won’t give him the gal !” cried 

one. 

“ They’re fightin !” shouted another. 

“It’s ’Lije — hurry and pitch him over!” 
was the address of one of the most prominent 
among the Killers. 

But the Bulgine, Elijah and the insensible 
girl were lost to view in the thick cloud which 
[ swept over the roof of the burning house. The 
suspense of the spectators did not long con- 
tinue. A dull, deafening crash was heard — 
“ the roof has fallen in !” rang from a thousand 
throats, and for a while the blackness of mid- 
night descended upon the scene. Then, up 
from the house, and through the thick black- 
ness which covered it, shot a column of blazing 
cinders, brightening up once more the faces of 
die spectators, and throwing a livid glare into 
the heavens. 

By that light, the riot began once more. The 
Bulgine, the girl and the convict hat! been en- 
gulfed in the fames ; and the Killers and their 
confederate rioters seeing nothing especial to 
occupy their attention, now that the crisis of 
the scene was over, went to work a^ain, and 

tf G * 

carried the ‘terror of their arms’ into the heart 

■P >• 

of the 4 negro camp.’ How they rioted at in- 
tervals through the whole night — how by 
morning-light the military came hurrying to the 
scene, their duty being to make up by ball and 
buckshot ior the cowardice and misconduct of 
the civil authorities — all this may be read in 
the daily papers of October 1849. 

The second day after the riot, two bodies 
were found in the cellar of the burnt hovel, their 
charred features, covered by wet and smoulder- 
ing embers. Which was the body of Bulgine, 
and which the body of Mr. Jacob D. Z. Hicks, 
none of the spectators could tell ; an old woman 
who stood in the midst of the assembled throng 

declared that one of the bodies, was that of her 
son, Elijah Watson. 

“ But my child — poor Kate, my child ! 

Where’s her body gone to ? Can’t nobody 

tell ? What was she doin’ in that nigger’s hut, 

when it was set afire ? Can’t nobodv tell ?” 

# 

In vain did Mrs. Watson utter these ques- 
tions with all the emphasis of her shrill voice 
Nobody could tell, except indeed the old lady 
herself, and she wisely held her peace. 





50 


Further search into the smouldering embers ] hands of the respectable man. And he grew 
disclosed the remains of another body, so hor- paler and trembled more violently as she con- 
rib ly burnt and disfigured as to be utterly un- 
distinguishable. Was it the body of Crom- 
well, Elijah, or Kate ? 


PART XXL 


CONCLUSION 


In the Trials of the Rioters, which took 
place within a month after the Riots, no one 
whl be able to discover the name of Elijah 
Watson. Nor 1 as Kate ever been seen, since 
the u’ght of the Riots, among the supernume- 
raries of the theatre. Whatever became of 
them — whether they escaped from the burn- 
ing roof, just before it fell, or whether they 
were engulfed in the ruins — cannot be dis- 
tinctly stated. One incident will bring this 
narrative to a close. A Philadelphia merchant, 
who had been connected with Mr. Hicks in 
his palmiest days, was observed to be in a 
great tremor, soon after the riots. He had be- 
come aware of the suicide of Don Jorge in 
the house of Mr. Hicks ; in fact, he had 
visited that house, the day after the riot, seek- 
ing Mr. Hicks on business connected with the 
Jifrican trade, and had found only the dead 
body of Don Jorge. Our merchant did not 

waste much time in the house, but hurried 

.* 7 

away to his own residence, where he was 
confronted by a young lady, who spake 0* 
matters which drove the very life-blood from 
his cheek. 


firmed her narrative. She was a very beauti 
ful, and yet a very determined young woman. 

He took counsel with the other parties im- 
plicated, and agreed to gTant her request. * 

This request granted, the young lady disap- 
peared, and was not again heard from, until 
the commencement of December, when our 
Merchant and his confederates — all Respecta- 
ble Killers — received a large pacquet, which 
had been brought from Chagres by the steamer 
Empire City. It was dated “ Panama, Nov* 
2nd , 1849 — and contained all the documents 
about the slave trade, together with the follow- 
ing tetter, which we transcribe, and which 
brings this Narrative to a close. 


To 


Paxama, Nor. 2, 1849. 
> Esq., Philadelphia. 


sm : — You and youT friends have fulfilled your pro- 
mise, to secure for Elijah and myseb an unmolested 
departure from your city, and a safe passage to Panama. 
And I now fulfil mine by transmitting to you the ac- 
companying papers which you will understand. Elijah 
and myself start for San Francisco to-morrow, where 
some day or other we may be heard from by other 
names, and under better circumstances than those which 


surrounded us in Philadelphia. 


Yours, &c., 
Kate Watson. 


THE END. 


* As a note to the above we append the following 
paragraph, which we extract from the Message of Pres- 
ident Taylor transmitted to Congress, on the 24th of 
December, 1849. 

u Your attention is earnestly invited to an amend - 


The young lady- — to the merchant unknown 
—had in some manner come into possession 
of those papers of the deceased Hicks, which 
implicated some four or five respectable houses 
in the profitable transactions of the African 
Slave Trade. Our merchant was among the 
number. 

And in a clear voice the young woman de- 
manded a certain favor as the price oi her se- 
crecy. She was not to be frightened ; the 
goodly man of business tried in vain to terrify 
her with the threat of a prosecution for u Con- 
spiracy to extort money.” She replied by 
stating every little fact embraced in the papers 
aforesaid, copies o' which she placed in the 


ment of our existing laws relating to tho African slave 
trade, with a view to the effectual suppression of that 
barbarous traffic. It is not to be denied, that this trade 
is still, in part, carried on by means of vessels built in 
the United States, and owned or navigated by some of 
our citizens. The correspondence between the Depart- 
ment of State and the Minister and Consul of the Uni- 
ted States at Hio de Janeiro, which has from time to 
time been laid before Congress, represents that it is a 
customary device to evade the penalties of our, laws by 
means of sea letters. Vessels sold in Brazil, when pro- 


vided with such papers by the Consul, instead of re- 
turning to the United States for a new register, proceed, 
at once, to the coast of Africa, for the purpose of ob- 
taining cargoes of slaves. Much additional information 
of the same character, has recently been transmitted to 
the Department of State.” 







/ 


f 


\ 

V 


1 


/ 


/ 



y 


FK>6tr;kte on his face, the blood from Ue wound trickling 

stood the Ne 


„ , . _ _ , t over the kQ&rds ofihe floor, and over him triumphant and cbucklinc 

the knife which he shook dripping vWred drops upon his black and brawny arm.